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This is a poem about tie-dyeing tshirts with my mom on our back porch. |
We were on the back porch, breathing in the humid air, wet with the smell of the dye we were sloshing on the wooden table. Wearing sunglasses, without gloves, with smoke and Jimmy Buffet drifting out the door, we were slapping mosquitoes and soaking up the white hot sun. We rolled up soft cotton shirts, twisted and knotted them, and bound them tight with thick, heavy rubber bands. We dipped them into the buckets; purple, blue, green, yellow and orange saturated the white, crawled up it, slowly darkening as it splashed, hot on my fingers, and dripped down my bare legs, leaving dark, wet streaks. We turned on the hose, loose, fizzing out at the nozzle, and ran the shirts under the freezing water, watching it run colors on the dirty bricks and pool into mud on the grass. We hung the shirts up on the line, strung up high between two trees, out of the reach of the puppy leaping up to bite them as they blew in the hot wind, baking, drying stiff. We went inside, me slipping from my flip flops squishing, and I was dizzy from the sun, seeing fuzzy pink spots, and my hands were dyed dark black. |