Showing posts with label Blue. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Blue. Show all posts

Sunday, August 10, 2025

EARLIEST MEMORY


The first thing I can remember is water -- not a lake
or river but the rising level of it in the bathtub, the untroubled
sheen of its surface splashing over the lip of porcelain,
below which many imaginary explorers went in search of
new worlds, new creatures, new routes of escape.
I am holding my favorite rubber alligator, the one I will
soon bring with me to foster care. But not just yet.
I have locked the door, but cannot remember
doing so. I can hear voices calling on the other side,
going back and forth, but do not answer.
I like the hum and gurgle of the water. I like the quiet.
But my older sister, convinced that I am drowning,
has scaled the creaking fire escape and kicked in
the window with her flimsy summer sandals, throwing
shards of glass across the smooth tiled floor.
They are like small jewels, aquarium green at their edges;
I want to pick them up and turn them in my hands.
We are fine, but we are both in trouble now.
Though our mother does not stir from the sanctuary of
her television-blue room, the permanent dusk she cultivates,
and does not bother to unlock her door. It is not time
for us to break that door in, its frame dangling
like a broken cross, nails bent downward. Not just yet.
For now, she stays in bed as though tethered there,
drifts in an ocean that is not quite oblivion,
steered by starlight we can neither follow nor understand.
We are fine, we are; but we will be in trouble soon.

Thursday, July 3, 2025

MY GRANDFATHER'S DAY BOOK

 


Worn and dappled with age, it creaks slightly upon opening, must in its creases, a small narrow door leading immediately into the past. The winding blue script within -- all of it in Finnish -- I can only translate in part, a reminder that language, like memory, can only take us so far. What is left out of this ledger -- this list of dates, facts, and figures -- must write its own story elsewhere. There is no listing for the cost of whiskey and cigarettes, no mention of the son drowned on the other side of the world, nor the wife who followed soon after, no price mentioned for the arsenic that took her. The margins are narrow. There is room only for what he is willing to record, that which makes sense and can be easily measured. I don't know where my own days stand, so many squandered with laziness, the stubborn refusal of youth, so many unaccounted for. I know only that their shadow grows long, no matter which direction I stand. If I am found lacking, grandfather, let these words be a start, let my debt be paid in the telling.

Wednesday, March 26, 2025

AIRPORT SUNRISE

When I was a kid, and you could do so, I loved
to wander through the vast, complex city of the airport,
past its chintzy gift shops and stuffy bars,
wafts of blue-tinged smoke and stale beer drifting
out into the clamor of air-conditioned lobbies,
where everything was in motion, the lives
of strangers and their families suddenly so close,
everyone embracing, everyone either waving
goodbye or hello for the first time in years.
Someone was always crying, sometimes a whole
congregation, shuddering as if from the cold.
Someone, you suspected, might never be seen again.
I would have been there with one of my sisters,
visiting from, or returning to, their separate family
in California, a mysterious land of earthquakes,
sun, and ocean, where the only snow they ever saw
came from postcards or their TV screens.
I loved the enormous glass walls at the terminals,
how they scaled upward seemingly without end, drifting
into shadow, the mighty and monstrous planes
gleaming on the tarmac, tiny men waving
each of them this way and that, flares in hand,
signaling in a language no one else could fathom.
I loved to see the sun hovering on the horizon,
throwing out a few tentative ropes of light,
then pulling itself up in earnest, blanketing this
flat and slightly tilted corner of the world; and I, too,
would be waving a solemn goodbye as my sister,
along with the other passengers, slump-shouldered,
moved forward down that accordion-like tunnel,
something small closing behind each of them,
like the shadow of a page being turned, sparks of blue
and yellow from a doorway I could not see.

Sunday, December 12, 2021

GHAZAL WRITTEN ON A SMALL PATCH OF WINTER SKY

 

That indescribable blue after a winter storm
reminded me of you, your eyes filled with distance.
What could I have said to keep you here longer,
when what I say now must reach through every distance?
God does not speak our language or write us letters,
our words merely fragments thrown into great distance.
There is a strange joy in singing deliberately off-key.
Any singing we can manage is a way to close the distance.
When I was younger, I walked without second thought.
Now, my bones upon waking remind me of each distance.
It's a kind of blessing to let each loss have its say.
Not all of us live to sign our names upon that distance.
Still, I never meant to say to let go of this world, brother.
Forgive me. You know I can never fill such a distance.

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