Crunching The Lunch or “You’re Not Worth Your Salt”

When was the last time 

You had to clear the slaughter’s slime?

The barn calls out for food and grime,

Cleaning up the cow’s hide

To fill the freezer space,

Waiting for dinner’s grace,

Remember leaning over in hours bent

Pulling weeds in growth’s intent,

To vegetate the lettuce, celery and rice, 

Carrots, potato, roots to boil

In winter’s cold and ice,

Waiting in cold storage bins? Nice!

Now, in packed up spaghetti to go,

Round and round and round,

The clock no longer full in farming time,

As I sit down when dinner’s served,

No shopping or chopping

In preparation I find, 

Only taste in hunger’s inspiration.

Even then, wanting good

From food that blindly grows,

Nobody knows.

My body eats itself into the sleep,

Walking in luxury’s dream,

Don’t even have to keep the kitchen clean.

Bacon didn’t remember the swine,

Hamburger no longer the cow,

Don’t even clean the rice,

I just chomp my jaws in what tastes nice,

Distracting my mind

In chewing’s haste,

Filling my gut in a longer belt . . .

It’s so nice to celebrate life

By eating out.

Who’s the cook?

Whose on the farm 

And in the fields?

How did I get so lost,  

And found, 

In the fruits of earth

Before they enter my mouth

And ignore the things 

In the barns left behind?

Crack an egg,

Pluck a chicken, 

Kill a lamb,

Skin a pig, 

Ham it up,

Eat the meat,

In protein’s heartbeat dead,

Crunch salad’s cabbage head,

Drink the wine, 

Forget the grapes,

Didn’t have to hunt to find.

What’s on the table to dine?

“Thank God I don’t have a barn!”

“Excuse me?”

“Please pass me the salt”.