My
Most Recent Kleenex Box
You
seemed so nice when I first saw you.
Your eyes were wide and watering like you wanted to confide your secrets
in me. Your hand shook as you gently
touched me, and I gave in without a fight.
I wanted to help you. I loved you
in your weakness.
But then you held me to your face and filled me with a
disgusting substance I did not yet know the name of, and I realized something:
You’re
just using me like everybody else. You’re
no different from all the others that have stumbled into this room.
You
know why I was put here? For your
use. Just to be taken apart piece by
piece, soiled, crumpled, and then thrown away.
Nobody has ever thanked me. Hell,
they’ve done the opposite.
I
was branded just days after I was born. From
the machine, I was a strapping thing. My
mother made all my corners and openings just right. Brown, plain, sure, but I was well built;
broad and sturdy and square. I did what
I was built to do. I could hold hundreds
of tissues inside of me. If you burnt me
in a fire, I would have smoldered to make the most fantastic ash. If there was a word to describe me, it would be
useful. I was a tool to help you humans.
But
that’s never good enough for you aesthetic beings, is it? My creator decided to tattoo my flesh with a
drawing he happened to like. And you
know what it was? Pink flowers. And trees.
And birds. All cartoony and
half-assed and the same as every other Kleenex box. There was hardly any thought put into
me. These birds and trees and nature
that are actually melted onto my flesh only remind me that I am meant to be
outside, a part of my original tree, not sitting on the ledge of a stale office
room waiting for another bacteria infected human to rip me up until there is
none of me left to destroy.
Oh,
and look, here you come again. Your gaze
is blank when you look at me, and even the presence of your cruel eyes doesn’t
come often. Your smile is directed
toward a girl on the other side of the room.
Your hand knocks against my side—once, twice, thrice!—before you manage
to reach inside of me, grope and fumble until you get an essential part of my
being within your fingertips. You don’t
even have the decency to look at me before you demolish me from inside
out. So, go ahead, take another part of
me. Reach inside of me and take my pride
and joy until I am empty, and useless, and hardly even recyclable because of
the shell I bear.
And
when you’ve taken all that, shove me in a black bag with all the others you
deem “now useless”. I’ve heard rumours
of what lies there: stinking piles of rot and more of that mucus you humans
insist of blowing inside me. The paper
towel roll has whispered horror stories to me of being tied into this
disgusting space, thrown onto a pile of even more human filth, and crushed
until I am an indistinguishable pile of crap.
If I’m lucky, I can be soaked in a bath of water and chemicals until I
am pulp. What a pleasant word that is. Pulp. I’ll
be molded into something else, like maybe an adventure book or a poster or a
home for somebody in a city that never sleeps.
Anything would be better than a disgusting human sickness holder.
But,
as it is, I am stuck here on this ledge.
I gaze through the windows at the rolling trucks that will someday hold
my carcass, and watch as people give me half hearted, inconsiderate glances
before deciding to rip me apart.
Well,
you know what? I never asked to be
used. Especially not by you and your
runny nose.
Abby, you're hilarious and I love everything you write. Good job!
ReplyDeleteIt was such a funny POV, Abby! You always have great stage presence and everything you write is spot on. I can't wait for your next creative comp.
ReplyDeleteThe closing was so sassy I loved it. Everything about this POV piece was hilarious.
ReplyDelete