Tuesday, April 25, 2023

7000 PAIRS OF CHILDREN'S SHOES ON THE CAPITOL LAWN

 

Where have you run to so quickly, dear children,
so fast and so frantic that you have flown,
wingless, from your shoes -- the mud-streaked sneakers
and Mary Janes, the summer flip-flops and rainbow
jellies, Western boots and boxy black Oxfords,
reserved for church and family weddings.
You have left no tracks, dear children, your voices
so high that they drip from the tips of branches,
or are disguised among the shrieks of passing birds.
But it's your songs which we miss the most now,
how you narrated the most mundane of days,
called out the clouds by name, laughed
so hard that we worried over your very breathing.
We have placed them here upon the lawn,
rows and rows of them, awaiting your return.
We have left a path between each for you to walk.
You do not answer, even with your silence.
Children, it's getting darker with each passing minute.
How will you find your way after sunset
and nothing on your feet? What could we have
done to keep you away so long?

Friday, April 21, 2023

SECOND MEETING WITH MY FATHER

 

After burying my half-brother that afternoon, I asked the cab driver to drop me at my father's shop on Rice Street, two blocks up from the housing projects, where as a child I had so often imagined him, alternately captaining a ship through far-off lands, or swilling cheap wine under a bridge with the other derelicts. But here I was, surprising him, weighted and imbalanced with grief and a lifetime of questions which I could not bring myself to articulate, even now. He moved, at his ease, through rows of carpet and color samples, walls stacked with gallon drums of paint, back to his wood-paneled office. I noticed the pigmentation of his hands had receded, leaving patches the color of lard shining through, or the underside of a painting that has begun to chip. "Well..." he began, offhandedly, "you and I just kind of went our separate ways" -- as if this were an explanation, as if the child had somehow agreed and denied the father as well. He leaned back in his desk chair, hands clasped behind his head, elbows pointed in either direction, asked what I did for a living. I told him that I was a poet, which he failed to acknowledge one way or another. "I mean," he tried again, "What do you do to put money in your pocket?" I shrugged, stammered out one dead-end job or another. It was hard to imagine this most plain-spoken of men ever sweeping my mother off of her feet, however briefly. But wounded people have a way of finding each other, and are privy to a language of their own. It was, in part, why I was here, a product of that wound. This, then, was the earthly kingdom he had constructed, and had chosen again and again. It was, I suppose, a life that he could understand, one of facts and figures, the tangible and the easily stated. I left him to it.

Friday, April 14, 2023

BAPTISM

 

The preacher pinches my nostrils between
thumb and forefinger, pushes me
backward, hard, into the chlorine sting
of the pool, its deep, still water immediately
closing in around me like a second flesh,
heavy and resolute. Once, then again,
I go under, the former self of my childhood
swimming away, an embryo in reverse.
The age of reason, against every obstacle,
has found me. I am old enough now,
my mother reminds me, to be held accountable,
old enough to suffer those unrelenting
flames through eternity, for lack of belief,
unintended blasphemy, or simple understanding,
Far overhead, the sun blazes on, unblinking,
the world surrounding it seemingly
turned upside down, wheeling, tumbling,
while here below, sudden slashes
of light pierce my uncertain periphery.
My instinct is to reach for it, to kick, flail,
break away; my instinct is to save
myself, to simply not drown -- as I feel I am --
whether by water, wine, or blood of lamb.
Then, as if it were unexpected, I am
pulled back into the world, sputtering, gasping,
the welcome shock of oxygen like pinpricks
to the lungs, as if I had been running for miles,
my first steps back on land uncertain.
This world is not my home, they are singing,
so happy to only be passing through.
But I don't know what could be better than
this -- the earth that accepts us again
and again, sinners to the last,
the one on which we write our songs, the one
that sings them back to us in return.

Sunday, April 9, 2023

FIRST APARTMENT

 

When I think of being seventeen, I think
of that dingy one-room apartment above
the nameless laundromat, its dirty glass clouded
with steam, potato-sweat stench and clutter
of that windowless apartment, rickety wooden stairs
leaning wearily against the red brick outside,
ready to collapse, shifting even without the weight of steps.
I remember the anonymous maps of water-stained
walls, so thin that I could hear my neighbors
coughing and brushing their teeth, playing the same
sad songs over and over, could feel the vibrations
of the industrial washers and driers below, like invisible
lovers nearing climax, never quite arriving.
When I think of being seventeen, I think
of walking to school in the dim morning, the afternoon
bus ride to work, bleary-eyed, the endless hours
given over to others in the name of survival,
collapsing at night onto a musty mattress
on the floor; I remember the kindness and mercy
of young women who passed through,
bringing canned soup and the comfort of touch, so new
and foreign, the small curtains of their mysterious
rooms opening just enough to let in the light,
remember the Dutch Bar across the street,
the line of gleaming Harleys outside, where someone
seemed to get stabbed every other week,
and the elderly deaf mute down the hall signaling
to no one in particular, a pinched sound like
a distant bird rising from the well of her throat,
a word of caution, perhaps, or insight that
I could not understand, then or now.

Friday, April 7, 2023

LARRY

 

Larry was the name of the man that my mother
married next, somewhere between ECT treatments
and her daily regimen of pills -- tall, gaunt and ruddy-faced,
simian ears that jutted forward like antennas,
or seashells, glowing translucent and red when
pierced by sunlight, tiny veins like a hundred cracks.
He mistook the marriage, I expect, for one
of love, but my mother needed him for
the much more practical task of disciplining my unruly
brother and me, which he did, following her
instructions like any low-level officer.
He was the first to fold me over a kitchen chair
and strike me, hard, then harder, and then hard enough
to dislodge me from the body, until there I was,
amazingly, watching somehow from above,
as though my own protector, keeper of a hidden
passageway deep within myself, previously unknown.
I didn't think that he was a bad man,
merely someone following orders, obedient
to a fault, perplexed, I imagined, as I was, watching,
as though this were but a poorly acted play.
Though I was, secretly, proud to have not cried,
proud to have left the body, without anyone so much
as noticing; and when I came back, having passed
their test, apologizing for my meager sins,
I didn't come back all the way. Not for them,
and not for a long time to come.

Sunday, April 2, 2023

COMFORTING THE CHILD

 

Being the only son of parents who
abandoned their children as easily as one
walks to the grocery store -- one
preferring the soft oblivion of Stoli and
sleeping pills, the other the peculiar balance of
status and anonymity that only money
affords, -- I stand, perhaps, too closely to
my own girl, always on guard,
hovering, worrying myself into sleeplessness.
I am nothing if not vigilant, an occasional
nuisance of concern, golden retriever of a father
at the gate, barely blinking, awaiting my cue.
When she races up the steps of her school,
confident in a way which I never was,
my pride mingles with a tinge of unspoken grief.
Still, I want nothing more than to be taken
for granted, to never be known as an absence.
I want for her the autonomy of knowing,
for love to be as constant and as easily forgotten
as the silent pulse of blood at wrist
and ankle, and my hand upon her shoulder
when she hurts, drawing circles
on her back, comforting, not only her
but the child no longer there.

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