You drive along the highway, closer to
something
Leaving something else behind,
The first thing you see is condos
Makes you wonder if there’s anyone left
In this city, or if they’re building just
because,
If you ever get the chance to leave
They’ll be the last thing you see
Before you’re gone (the condos)
But most of us don’t, or won’t.
Every day a coffee shop springs up around
the people
Traps them in like caffeinated ghosts,
We already had a zoo but now I guess
We’ve got two, one for the kids
One for the tourists, foreign and domestic,
They arrive on planes, leave on planes,
But in between they’re part of it
And I bet there are six or seven
New condos to confuse their photographs.
You feel lighter than you did when you
arrived
Are your pockets half-empty
Or will you cling to your suburban
optimism?
In spite of endless, relentless skinny
white girls
There are vague notions of gas money
Bus tickets or dingy western trains
Still buried in your wallet with a
SIN card and a bunch of hard plastic
Photos used to spell your name.
Grande decaf lactose-free no fun latte
please
With a vanilla biscotti to go
Just to spice it up for once, those days
You remember that you came here
For adventure, wasted all your time
Waiting in line at the entrance
Now you’re wishing these sidewalks
Could take you home, too bad
They’ve built another condo in the way.
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