The bakery opens.
Bread rises like lungs.
I know this neighbourhood
the way one recalls a dream:
blue-eyed cats and rubber tree.
I tell the hairdresser,
it’s time for a chop,
which means I want to love again.
He says to return later
so I walk to the sea’s blue mouth,
its yellow forehead,
this haze of pollution.
Such determined generators.
What keeps us awake?
Bread and blade.
This machine of ordinary beauty.
