My Massage Therapist Asks if the Pressure’s Too Much

Abbie Kiefer

Let me tell you, Lil—I’m here to be borne
                            down on. Give me the unambiguous
burden of your forearm and the immutable
                            plane of your table, where I cried   

just that once, thinking of my last
                            trip to Home Depot. The engulfment 
of ivories, swatched and racked 
                            like a shark’s teeth, row behind row behind 

row behind row, and the roof-high aisles
                            of essentials: scrapers and tape and high-density
rollers. I always want to make improvements
                            the right way. Yes, Lil, my shoulders often carry

a clench between them. No, I’m not too warm—
                            another thing I should work on. The volume
could be a little lower on all the flute music 
                            and this cover of Sweet Child O’ Mine,  

Rolling Stone’s 88th Greatest Song of All Time, 
                            rendered on piano: the easy brush of broken
chords without Axl Rose howling to be told
                            where should he go now, where should

he go. I don’t fault him for demanding 
                           direction. For wanting someone
to gently wake him when he hums
                           the 87th Greatest Song in shifting sleep,

to remind him to stretch his trapezius, tight
                           as the strings on Slash’s guitar. To promise
any shade will be fine for the walls
                           of his half-bath: Swiss Coffee or Spun 

Cotton or any of the others, applied 
                            with rollers of any density, taping the trim
or not. It’s only paint, Axl, only rollers. 
                            Right, Lil? Only a bathroom, and only half.