There's one above my
head,
|
|
stretching from walnut
door frame
|
|
to bare bulb. It bows
from
|
|
Missouri rain
|
|
long since evaporated.
|
|
Houses aren't built like this anymore.
|
|
Lath and plaster takes too
much effort.
|
|
Drywall is cheap. Time-efficient.
|
|
Another crack festers
|
|
a floor below
|
|
in my father's study.
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|
"Too much roughhousing."
|
Nails are used to break the joints.
|
It curbs the chance
|
|
of
future rifts.
|
|
Preemptive
separation.
|
|
The
ceiling in the spare room
|
|
used to
have a crack.
|
|
Before
it collapsed.
|
|
This
house is not built for my father.
|
|
Too many
parts to fix
|
|
to fit
into his schedule.
|
|
He is
not a patient man.
|
|
I cut
myself
|
|
tiptoeing around
|
|
pieces of plaster.
|
|
No one
was around
|
|
to clean
up the mess.
|
|
I
tried to fix the one above my head
|
|
once,
but I had the wrong tools.
|
|
I
stirred up 21 year old spackle
|
|
instead
of reinforced fiberglass tape.
|
|
Now
the ceiling is just a patchwork
|
|
of
“not good enough”.
|
|
I wait
for the day
|
|
pressure
shifts
|
|
and I
collapse under the weight
|
|
of a
decaying, bungalow-styled
|
|
family.
|
Monday, April 18, 2016
Cracks in the Plaster
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