When I was a kid, I felt invisible more often
than not -- sometimes through a combination
of will and imagination, and sometimes
voices prone to shouting, from the kitchen
or the living room, "Get those kids
out of here! I can't hear myself think."
It was good, then, to have a vanishing act,
to know when to slip away, and when to stay gone.
Now that I am growing older,
gray, unassuming, fumbling for
my reading glasses, I again
feel myself becoming part of the unseen
or what my mother and aunts
used to refer to as a Jasper,
that eternal stranger passing through, ostensibly
harmless, whose name no one could recall.
There's no loneliness like a crowd,
and while this is neither comfort
not revelation, it is not without advantages.
In the coffee shop, I order without
small talk, I sit, off to the side, sketching a few words
the way an artist might sketch
a tree, a cloud, a figure in the distance
a world I may enter, as I always have, disturbing
no one in my coming or going.