So thirty-five years from now
Youโll meet me at the airport
Weโll go to lunch in your city
And Iโll pick up the check to show you how well Iโve done.
This is after we stripped the woodwork
This is after the acid and the West Side Highway
This is after the Bicentennial parade
We dance in Denver on St. Patrickโs Day.
Your daughter will buy me a beer
My daughter will cry on the phone.
I want you to, donโt want you to kiss me.
Iโm not as single as you are, and the years have turned to miles.
This article appears in August 2011.








