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Robins
Do you have a favorite bird?
She’ll ask
And suddenly you don’t know what a bird is so you’ll say
Penguins
And she’ll ask
What’s your favorite airborne bird?
So you’ll ask for her’s
And she’ll say
Robins
So you ask
Why?
And she’ll say
I watched one nest outside my window once when I was nine
The way it laid its home next to mine, ever the chippy neighbor
It puked in its child’s mouth and called it love,
All my mother shoved down my throat was soap
Their pink downs became orange and grayish
And I watched them for hours some days,
The other days I’d read everybit I could on them
Did you know the lifespan of a robin is around the same length of a human relationship?
She’ll ask
No, I didn’t know that
You’ll say
And one day when I went to check on the nest, they had begun to fly away,
Kicked out of their home. Brood parasitism is the term.
But when I looked down, below the nest, a fledgling.
It’s orange and grayish all over my porch. It’s brothers and sisters never came back.
And it’s mother moved out. My dad scraped it from the concrete.
So what’s your favorite bird
She’ll ask again
And you didn’t have one before, but now you say,
Robins
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