“ … Whatever
	    mistakes we make, we will become what we are
 	    because of our blunders.”
                         Dorianne Laux “Zulu, Indiana (An Ode to the Internet)”   
O stirrup pants, o acid-washed jeans, o single  
black lace glove and rubber bracelets. Forgive me,  
but you were mistakes, all of you,  
you and the thigh-ripped-open jeans 
I criss-crossed with skate laces. O big hair, 
o green eye shadow, o hanging out on the beach 
drinking ill-gotten Bartles & Jaymes and letting JP 
of the fake ID unlace me and feed me 
vodka-spiked watermelon  
and slide his fingers inside me.  
O dark parking lot, o end of the lane. 
O you missteps, you well-practiced mistakes, 
you paving of my crooked road. Fender-bender  
in the McDonald’s parking lot  
on the way home from Great America  
because I was too impatient  
to wipe the steam from the back window.  
The ride I hitched with those guys 
who turned out to be high 
and on shore leave. O narrow escapes. 
That haircut sophomore year. 
That blue prom dress. Jellies. 
Not going to Homecoming with G  
because nice guys scared me 
more than JP and his Alabama Slammers. 
O grapefruit diet, o Jane Fonda’s Workout, o beginning 
of erasure. Daisy Dukes and ankle boots, 
D+ in calculus, girl sitting in the back row 
chewing her hair. O child, o paving stone, 
o boat somebody else rowed. Off-the-shoulder 
sweatshirts, “Let’s Get Physical,” o parachute pants— 
the kind that were so easy to slip out of.