Poems About Work: Desk Job, Carla Galdo
Desk Job I cleaned my desk today, removed the stacks of newsletters, receipts, and doctor’s bills. With rag in hand, I made a few attacks on dried-up evidence of coffee spills. I shelved the books—they’d sprouted up again in leaning towers inked with potencies on deckled gills, like mushrooms after rain. I opened wide the curtains so the breeze could run its vigor through the room, and sweep away the stagnant air, and clear my mind, where sins lie in their jumbled, grubby heap— some known, confessed, and some not yet defined. I scrubbed the wooden window sills, the grime, the carcasses of flies who met their end short of the inaccessible sublime. Why must we beat our heads like them, why spend our days in fruitless wrangling with ...