An Everywhere Poem: The One Busted for Drugs
Pollen is thick as midges
on a loch,
a leaf blower
and the windscreen
is clear.
Bless their obnoxious noise.
Coupon in my pocket.
Spend £60,
get £20 off.
£60 is easy.
Meat, more meat
and maybe a chicken.
Pallets in the aisle.
Shopping trolleys
stop,
turn,
batter one another.
No milk.
No lettuce.
No beans.
Green cabbage reduced.
“Heatwave,”
says a man
in a green apron.
“Heatwave,”
repeats his helper.
A woman in the queue
points at thunderheads.
“How about that house
on Station Hill,” I say,
“struck by lightning
and caught fire.”
Back home,
a leaflet hangs
like a tongue
from the letterbox.
A new pizza shop
where the dry cleaners
used to be.
The one busted for drugs.
So not a dry cleaner
at all.
Everywhere Poems don’t have a subject. They have a starting point, somewhere, and follow wherever attention leads. It’s — go for a walk and see where you end up.
Some images created with Midjourney; all writing is my own original work.©Misky 2006-2026.

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