We’re the only ones we / race against, we think. We speak / in tongues. We know that family / matters most. Bang, bang. “What will / we have today?” we ask / when we serve at oily restaurants.
Poetry by Colin Criss
We speak in tongues.
 We call cardinals red, they sing
 many different songs. We
 sing songs: we enjoy
 variety. Shows of it.
 Singing, dancing, Lawrence Welk.
 We make time for him:
 Saturdays, 8pm on PBS. Bang, bang.
 We love guns. All of us: We agree.
 We run marathons when necessary, 
 when a message must be delivered. 
 Always 26.2 miles. Bang, bang. 
 We believe in democracy.
 We march until we 
 are in sight of the finish line.
 Then, it is a scramble and a lean—
 we lean over the line, even when
 we finish last. We race for time!
 We’re the only ones we
 race against, we think. We speak
 in tongues. We know that family 
 matters most. Bang, bang. “What will
 we have today?” we ask 
 when we serve at oily restaurants.
 We hate “we-talkers.” We’ll have
 the venison, no onions. What do we know 
 about ourselves? A deer that once
 stood on the edge of a field. 
 Colin Criss lives in Moscow, Idaho, and teaches at Washington State University. He has an MFA in Poetry from Washington University in St. Louis. His poems have also appeared, or will soon, in GRIST, Cagibi, Up North Lit, and the Harvard Advocate. He is from Old Forge, NY.
Connect with Colin on Twitter @colincriss and on Instagram @colincriss.
