For a few months of grade school somewhere between
Mismatched socks and argyle sweaters
I was obsessed with Hubba Bubba Bubblegum.
Grape, sour watermelon, blue raspberry,
Anything that could blow double bubbles and eventually get
Stuck in my straw-style hair.
I’d practice outside for hours
Trying to get the perfect bubble inside a bubble,
Like Dad could
But they always popped too soon.
Mom hated bubble gum.
The smell,
The texture,
The sound of smack-smack-smacking
Made her gag like a mouthful of maggots.
I’m older now and I can appreciate
My bubblegum phase for what it was,
A stretching, sticky mess of figuring out
Who I was and who I thought I wanted to be.
Somehow I couldn’t fit the two bubbles together,
Who I was took up too much tack,
Always smack-smack-smacking
Their opinions together and popping into conversations without warning
Or approval.
I spit them out,
The person I was,
They lost their flavor too soon like Fruit Stripes
Blew the worst bubbles like Trident,
Always comparing themselves to other Hubba Bubba Bitches.
I find myself wishing I could relive those days on the porch steps,
Blowing bubble after bubble,
Chewing until my jaw aches,
Trying to stretch
For something, someone, some desire
And I deflate just the same.
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