"Curses, outbursts / and distracting chants simmer all day / long in the Crock-Pots of our heads."

— Gerstler, Amy (b. 1956)


Publisher
Orig. published in American Poetry Review
Date
2006
Metaphor
"Curses, outbursts / and distracting chants simmer all day / long in the Crock-Pots of our heads."
Metaphor in Context
[...] These days, I own five
sets of encyclopedia from various
eras. None of them ever breathed
a word about the fact that this humming,
aromatic, acid flashback, pungent, tingly
fingered world is acted out differently
for each one of us by the puppet theatre
of our senses. Some of us grow up doing
credible impressions of model citizens
(though sooner of later hairline
cracks appear in our façl;ades). The rest
get dubbed eccentrics, unnerved and undone
by other people's company, for which we
nevertheless pine. Curses, outbursts
and distracting chants simmer all day
long in the Crock-Pots of our heads
.
Encyclopedias contain no helpful entries
on conducting life's business while the ruckus
in your skull keeps competing for your
attention [...]
(pp. 30-1, ll. 22-43)
Provenance
Reading the New York Times Book Review. David Kirby's review, "Animal Planet." November 8, 2009.
Citation
Gerstler, Amy. ""For My Niece Sidney, Age Six." The Best American Poetry. Eds. Billy Collins and David Lehman. Simon and Schuster, 2006. pp. 30-3. <Link to Google Books>
Date of Entry
11/11/2009

The Mind is a Metaphor is authored by Brad Pasanek, Assistant Professor of English, University of Virginia.