Stitching Time's Ankles Together


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Stitching Time’s Ankles Together


I caught Time mid-stride, all calves and calendar,
sprinting barefoot through my to-do list,
and thought, what if I hemmed him in?

So I fetched my grandmother’s thimble,
threaded it with good intentions (the color of “Monday”),
and crouched behind the hour hand like a tailor with delusions of grandeur.

Time pretended not to notice,
whistling elevator music, checking his watch
(which is just himself, very meta).

I aimed for the ankles - neat cross-stitch,
nothing aggressive, just a polite hobble
so he’d stop outrunning my ambition and sit awhile for coffee.

But Time has excellent cardio.

He laughed in leap year, flicked lint from his lapel of seconds,
and dragged my tidy seam down the boulevard of afternoon.

Now I’m here with a spool of “eventually” unraveling at my feet,
needle stuck in the cuff of yesterday,
explaining to the mirror that this was always performance art.

Truth is, Time doesn’t need tripping.
He needs dancing with,
a little less chase, a little more waltz.

Still, if you see him limping,
just slightly,
that was me.

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This ekphrastic poem's title is the eighth line from one of my earlier poems, that poem was made up of incomplete sentences, that somehow made great titles.

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©2026 Christopher Reilley 

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Comments

  1. We all appreciate your attempts to slow down time, Especially me on today my birthday. I like the sewing metaphor, well done! 🩵

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  2. I need time to slow down too, Chris. I love the idea of this poem. But Time can’t be caught and I can imagine him laughing in leap year and flicking lint from his lapel of seconds.

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  3. The 2 last verses are my favourite
    Happy you dropped by my blog


    Much love

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  4. Love, love your poem. It continues to surprise and delight right up to its ending.

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  5. What a creative personalization of Time. I feel the passing very deeply. We can be gentle with ourselves after all. And this is my favorite part:

    Truth is, Time doesn’t need tripping.
    He needs dancing with,
    a little less chase, a little more waltz.

    ReplyDelete

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