Saturday, July 6, 2024

ADDICTION

 


You held your secrets close, as gently
as they would allow, as if they, too, were
wounded things, in need of your full and constant
attention, as if keeping them cocooned
in your cool, anemic room kept you both safe.
So much we did not and could not know,
so much you kept even from yourself.
You longed most for respite from this life,
its continual demands, its pettiness and pretense,
the futility you saw in its endless disguises.
You wanted to step outside of it all, time itself
racing past the window glass, frame by crooked frame.
What a shock, then, when it found you unaware.
What a shock when the pills swallowed you.
I still don't understand the simplest things
in this life -- like how to love and be loved without
fear, or how to explain to others that you were
never the measure of your illness alone.
I still don't know if the world, as you might
have said, is so bitter that we must wash it down
with something strong, or so very sweet
and wonderous that we must raise our glasses
again and again. You tell me. You tell me.

Sunday, June 30, 2024

AT THE HISTORY CENTER

 


After exploring the wood-paneled rooms furnished with black rotary phones, cocktail trays, and TV consoles the size of refrigerators, my daughter and I climb the narrow ramp into the belly of a World War II C-47 aircraft, sitting for a moment in dim uncertainty, as the ghosts of this craft did decades earlier. We can see the light outside shifting from amber to gray and back again, sense the angled approach of large water, before the wing catches fire and the voices of those men -- hopelessly young -- return, bellowing above bomb blasts, terrified, cursing every God under the sun with words we do not use at home. My daughter clutches my arm, wonders aloud which of her classmates, soon to be entering third grade, would survive such a perilous mission. Only two or three, she decides solemnly. When the silence returns, it is jarring and final, the silence of all those lives, barely begun, layered on top of one another. But I can hear the cries of the soon-to-be dead behind us, starting up again, the same explosions drawing closer from every direction. We walk back into the sunlit lobby, wondering what we will have for lunch. Our sky is blue, and this day -- soon to be part of our past -- open before us.

Sunday, June 23, 2024

ASHES

 


For weeks, then months, they sit undisturbed
on a makeshift shelf in your brother's musty garage,
the gray-white residue that once answered
to your name packed neatly into a surprisingly
small cardboard box, unadorned and anonymous.
Drums of exterior paint and car exhaust
surround you now, boxes of tools, and bulky
winter clothing packed in large plastic containers,
the ordinary stuff of life in process.
This is not the respite that I would have wished
or imagined for you, dear friend; though
you will be relieved to know that this stop is not
final, only a way station before the long drive
out of state where you will be scattered,
per your request, out near the railroad tracks
which run the length of your old hometown,
where your mind -- always too sharp and too busy
for its own good -- could wander with neither
weight nor interruption, and your body
could walk and walk never losing its way back.
It's a walk I can't make with you; but should I hear
the call of that Illinois Central, rising
above the chatter of birds and traffic hum,
declaring its own speed and distance, at just
the right angle, I'll say they're playing our song,
as if I could remember the words or tune,
as if the grain and grit of your slender bones
were somehow able to dance again.

Sunday, June 16, 2024

THE PAST

 


So much of life is past tense
these days, even when spoken of
in what passes for the here and now.
So much becomes after the fact,
though the facts themselves
remain anything but clear.
I still look for you when I enter
those musty white rooms,
my mind waltzing between what
I know and all that I cannot.
You know I never learned to dance,
or to feign forgetfulness.
But the past no longer requires
our presence, no matter how often
we wander through, touching
one item, then another, as if we
might be found within them.
Our fingerprints stick to nothing.


Wednesday, June 12, 2024

CEMETERY GRASS

 

I remember, too, you brushing your hair
in the morning, never gently, but with a quiet
vengeance, as one would rake a field
full of fallen leaves. I imagined, still half asleep,
the sound of claws digging through
deep undergrowth, sparks of electricity
thrown this way and that, lightning flashing
with your frustration below the surface.
"I'm a hag!," you would call out,
and on a good day you would be laughing,
throwing that calico brush to the floor
like a weapon no longer of use.
But I loved your hair, thick and stubborn
its springs and tendrils always reaching upward,
shining like sunlight through whiskey,
threads of silver arriving much too early
for your liking. You said they were your ghosts
returning to have their say, too many
forgotten lives for you to keep track of.
Now, I dress for an early autumn, no matter
the weather, a far cry from the young man
you once loved; and you have become
another ghost to walk beside me, stirring
the trees, brushing the clouds aside as easily
as spider web, curtains, or breath.


Wednesday, June 5, 2024

TURBULENCE

 



Flying into New York for the first time,
all those years ago, the plane gliding through
wisps of white cloud, waving and vanishing,
before the gray and the darkness
rose to meet us, rough knots of wind
jolting us one way, then another, as if God,
having failed to reach us through other means,
was again trying to get our attention.
Lightning broke like a crack in the glass,
the plastic curtain of the window falling shut,
while my anxious mind immediately began
to map out the details of our demise,
engines coughing and sputtering into silence,
the passengers behind us praying without reserve,
the strangely serene drop from 40,000 feet
to some abandoned field, your thin summer skirt
with its pattern of daisies blending into
the long, wet grass, the shapes of our bodies,
appearing to be running -- whether toward
each other or away -- imprinted into the earth.
But just as quickly, the darkness gave way
to sunlight, the clouds began to erase and rewrite
themselves, shapes of commas and ellipses
trailing off, above and below, the brief story of
our life together -- part comedy of errors,
part tragedy -- still being written, still in search
of an ending that would make sense.


Monday, May 27, 2024

THE LAST TIME

 


The last time I saw you, after so long apart,
I was, I confess, startled by how small you seemed,
as if you had somehow perfected a means of
walking away while standing perfectly still, or were
trying to slip out of this world unnoticed.
Your shoulder blades shown through your frayed
gray sweater, your blue eyes drifting further and further
into themselves. Perhaps our former lives always
seem smaller when we wander back in, or perhaps
we are merely the worry dolls of anxious gods,
worn smooth as river stone with time.
You were having trouble eating, you confided,
and trouble sleeping, too -- though
this malady was certainly not new to you,
your mind forever leaping from one thought to
another at the most inconvenient of hours.
Would I have wanted to know in that moment
that this meeting, seemingly insignificant,
was also a kind of parting, that you would soon
disappear into the shadow world of self, no longer
calling or answering the phone, no longer
reading, or bothering to venture outdoors?
Would I have spoken something disguised
as wisdom, or offered you some small comfort,
a prayer which you would almost certainly have refused?
Would I have thought to ask for forgiveness,
or simply to thank you for the years we walked together?
I do not know. But we parted with smiles that day,
not the slightest taste of bitterness lingering
between us. We were kind, as we had been
at the beginning, as we were meant to be, two
old friends softened into unexpected middle age,
adept, at last, with the familiarity of our leaving.

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