(Originally posted on Sep. 17, 2015)
Sunday, December 08, 2024
Somewhere
(Originally posted on Sep. 17, 2015)
Back, with a Limp
that much I know now.
Looking at your face,
an echo of what I was,
my pretenses falter.
The corners of your smile
still wrinkle with the same abandon;
your eyes, holes in my fabric.
It wasn’t…
It was for my defeat in you that I sang,
falling gloriously all the way
and climbing up again.
You were only an excuse for my loss,
a reason for shattering.
The void in me where you nestled
was older than us.
And for being so blind,
I seek forgiveness.
You did not earn
the wrath I sprung on you;
you were not worthy of the venom.
Glitter on, like I never happened.
Soak the life I dreamed in you,
and bask in my absence.
I continue limping,
lifting the shadow that I cast,
unfurling.
I have yet to fill
what I thought you had left.
And I have yet to name it.
Tuesday, November 26, 2024
Sentences
fill the silence with nonsense;
_____a friendship dwindled
_____into the vestige of a dream.
The hallway stretches ahead
once more like a phone call
lagging a world in between.
Letters scratched off cereal boxes;
a life crammed into
the distance of a scream.
Replay the rhymeWelcome the words back
like a country expecting
like the waiting,
____recurring
__________recurring
_____recurring,
__________recurrin'.
still dusty from the rubble;
the ones that made it will do.
Those missing, have done their job;
they'll remain somewhere
in a sentence, in a thought.
Incomplete sentences are sentences,
too, in some languages
where the dead have names.
But for now, only hint at them--
you never knew them,
they never knew today.
Stick the alphabet, one after the other,
down the graves
where the soil is supple still.
One day a sentence will begin again
written with characters
they once knew.
They spelled their names
with all the voices of the earth
in a corner where the shadows never heave.
(originally posted on August 24, 2006)
Friday, October 11, 2024
Pretenses
I can always pretend it took a few days longer in the mail.
Peace,
another word to ruminate over,
chew on it like cud, and regurgitate.
No, I won’t tell you what it is;
one of those things you know only when you lose,
like life, like happiness,
like your keys.
We were walking 'round the neighborhood when the weather started to shiver,
looking inside houses, cloaked in the night—
if people knew how much their chandeliers told about them, they’d lose them.
I was savoring the cold like I do my sadness—
silently, with nostrils open, and a smirk on the inside of my mouth.
I was pretending, when we buy a house, I can invite my family over some time.
But the thought got stuck, there, on a wooden bench near the back entrance,
damp with the evening’s breath, fibers gaping, ready for the frost.
Peace.
Should the peaceful even be allowed to talk about it?
If we could only will it, we wouldn’t be here.
Yes, let’s pretend.
Pretense,
that’s how people wait for peace, pretending that it was there.
And in the meantime, there are fridges to be cleaned.
We celebrated our seventh anniversary in front of the TV—no sex, just apple pie.
Our faces were beaming in the glow of having said it all,
or just enough—the rest is too boring anyhow.
These days I can pretend to devour him—he doesn’t even need to know.
Peace.
It’s like nothing, the anticipation of pain—
is good the absence of evil?
Abundance, time, they cost.
One of those things you forget about.
(Originally posted on October 20, 2006)
Thursday, October 03, 2024
Yoke (Concept of a Nation)
Hunched
in our corners of the earth,
holding down the fort,
pretending to do something.
Garbling
a code of song,
of longings of ten years ago,
and of love
to this concept of a nation,
this bowl of fire
in the guts.
This resonance of a woman’s voice
reverberating in the heat;
this prayer of desperation
that shudders under the familiarity of death;
this face, grown weary from
this concept of a nation.
The rhythm of days
has grown syncopated
in the largesse of your breath.
You, inhabiting the rubble,
the ghost streets and the night,
the night pregnant with the silence
of those who weren’t there.
You, parting the weight of the air
laden with age,
with truncated years.
You, carrying the clot of a promise
between your teeth
like a mother cat carries her young.
Lift the yoke of what remains
and trudge
_____forward, somewhere
the earth will exhale
and flatten her bust for you.
(Originally posted on August 29, 2006)
Cats
where my life used to be.
A continuum of tedium,
stopped in its tracks,
a cavity blown
where the banality once was.
Now my life is much too serious,
and yet the world around me isn’t.
The light on Chestnut Hill never dims.
I hesitate to tell the people there
that somewhere else
the sun is broken.
That somewhere else
my dad tells me
--so earnestly he could almost believe it--
that it will be alright.
That, miraculously, our building still stands,
and that he ventures home still,
every once in while,
to feed my sister's cats.
I don’t tell him it’s the cats
that make me cry.
That the thought of them cowered
in the stairwell,
not even meowing,
as the world’s face is peeled
is all I can handle.
My aunt cowering in the emergency room,
I can’t.
Whatever lies next to her,
behind the curtains,
I don’t want to think.
It thunders here,
my cat is behind the toilet bowl,
inside the couch,
and underneath the bed--
all at once.
I don’t even want to think of those cats.
Friday, September 27, 2024
Looking Through Your Eyes
my country,
as for the first time.
The tight colorless street
where I grew up
choking with people,
_____now covered with a dust
_____sinful as only humanity is.
I remember looking up
as you raised your head
at buildings that resembled
pockmarks on the face of God.
_____They now rest in pieces
_____on the streets
_____and the face of God
_____is nowhere to be seen.
I remember meeting my family
in you,
sprawling, loud and insuppressible,
spreading over the table like a headache
that shouldn’t be cured.
_____Now the table lies naked,
_____all the colors of the vegetables
_____turned black.
_____Even the flies recoil.
I remember climbing the shoulders of the mountain,
the plain spreading behind us,
patchy and still,
and the valley round the corner,
yawning wide,
like the mouth of heaven.
_____Now it doesn’t shed a tear for us.
_____It had been there when it all began,
_____when men fell from grace
_____and ate each other.
(Originally posted on July 28, 2006)
Friday, September 13, 2024
Let it burn
Let it all dim a bit
Let the lights flicker and die
Let the noise chatter itself soar
Let this chaos wind itself into the ground
It all shall be...
Let the words wrestle themselves into oblivion
Let everything exhaust itself
Like dogs
Like street walkers
Like this city
The trash shall burn, and we shall choke
Someone cannot breath, this too shall pass
Taste the char in the air, the remains of what was
Looking back, what does he miss the most?
Or is he beyond? Beyond missing
Beyond the yearning, beyond the din
Is he now only a memory, like so many others
Fading, receding, but haunting
Every now and then, in the making of the self
In the unmasking of life, in the crevices of the everyday
In me, you live in me, whether I like it
Or die in you, as I would
Thursday, January 04, 2024
Childish Fears
I have managed to flip my fear inside out.
Now you don't recognize it,
Now it looks like anger:
It ravages everything around me,
And everyone..
Could it all be something else?
All the empathy and the compassion?
Is it only because last century it was me
That was the child in fear?
Of the same terror, rolling its aRs
And mangling our 7as,
Like the flight of death?
I think of the one I love:
Was all his resentment only
Because, a decade or two ago,
He too was the child in fear,
Abandoned like all the children
Now ravaging our screens?
And what becomes of it?
All this fear? All this apathy?
All these angry childish stares?
What remains when the faces are gone?