Sunday, September 29, 2024

TO THE YOUNG WOMAN WEEPING WHILE DONATING PLASMA

 

I cannot know your story -- the river of time
and circumstance that brought you here
today -- only this slender moment of quiet
unraveling, weighted tears pooling and tumbling
from the corners of your almond eyes,
gray-blue and receding from view, your face --
so young -- bruised already from within.
Grief has come to claim you, this much is clear,
blurring your edges, as though submerged,
even in this clinical afternoon light;
grief gazes back, unblinking as the day itself
through the clouded lens of your phone.
The little I know, or at least pretend to believe,
I cannot speak, not wanting to be the unwelcome
stranger who pierces your necessary solitude.
I would not trouble you with all the heartaches
yet to come, as they most certainly will;
I would speak only of the moments between,
moments of ease and exhalation where
you could alter course, arranging possibilities
like so many books upon the shelf. I would
remind you simply to raise high the window blinds,
to leave the door ajar, so that when joy
returns, it will know just where to find you.

Thursday, September 19, 2024

GUPPIES

 

Nothing grew in that drab one-bedroom
apartment, gray-blue light cast from the swerving
freeway below, the old service road following
beside it like a shadow, then turning
with a half-hearted shrug, a sad aquarium
of ordinary days circling, reflecting,
measuring themselves against us.
You moved the plants from one window
to another, hung them in the kitchen,
then the bathroom, fed them on eggshells
and coffee grounds -- all to no avail,
their brown and brittle ghosts too weary
to drift away, littering the floor and windowsills.
When we came back from that day trip
to the lake, the guppies you had just bought
were floating on the surface of the water,
their small incandescent bodies motionless,
tailfins like flames sputtered out, yet still glowing;
we knew, separately, without having to say,
that something larger had ended.
You left, at a ridiculous hour of the night,
a time normally reserved for old blues songs,
and weeks later, I did too, filling every bag
and suitcase with all the emptiness I could claim.
Even now, I wonder why we chose that place,
whether in hope or desperation; even now,
I wonder in what other rooms,
what other lives, we might have survived.

Wednesday, September 11, 2024

FOOSBALL

 

Sometime during the night -- tall, silent trees still
breathing the lingering heat of daylight --
my older brother and his high school friend released
the unattended foosball table from the confines
of the White Bear Lake Yacht Club, where Scott and Zelda
once whiled away their early days, their smart
summer whites billowing like sails against the blue,
like all those blank pages waiting patiently to be filled.
But my brother, in his cut-off jeans and rust-colored
tank top, would not have been thinking of this;
nor would he have considered the first quick sketches
of this game on a matchbox in some British pub,
nor the poet who perfected it so that the children of
the Spanish Civil War could still know laughter and play.
He would have been walking calmly, deliberately,
laughing, I suspect, under his breath with his buddy,
up the four long blocks to our falling-down house
with its equally falling-down porch and garage,
his dying car on makeshift blocks beside it.
He might have reminded himself, as he often did
to me, not to run or look afraid. To be cool.
The next day he polished it the way he polished
that car, a kind of blessing, and we played
outside on our uneven patch of lawn, islands
of dry dirt on either side, bright sun shining down
upon us, and our newly acquired pitch of green;
and for one brief moment, the day, the neighborhood,
if not the world itself, belonged to us alone,
as we spun those black handles into a steady blur,
breaking our own rule, showing off, just to see
who could hit the hardest into that narrow goalpost,
its white plastic ball echoing, even now.

Thursday, September 5, 2024

BETWEEN BURSTS OF THUNDER, WE HEAR ROBINS SINGING


If we cannot learn the song
of these birds, calling through
the shuddering dark, let us at least
better study their silence.
If we cannot know the secrets
of their flight, let us at least
acquire the stillness they have
perfected on thin air.

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