Springtime again. For the first time, I find myself wondering whether April passed by just a bit too fleetly. Two weeks ago, walking back to my apartment from morning coffee with my roommate, I was abruptly struck by a wave of green. Lush trees, gleaming grass. The world was suddenly a movie set, wont to change seasons through the invisible hands of some hardworking crew.
Last week, I drove home and felt the passage of time in a hundred small ways: my family golden retriever gone from the house and its rituals, my sister unboxing her life in a new apartment, my father’s family gathering to hold one another and say goodbye to my aunt, his sister. Everything changes color, though rarely all at once. One by one, elements of our world move beyond the frame.
After work, I run three miles around Pittsburgh. For the most part, I’ve finally mapped a few routes evading steep hills and crumbling sidewalks. A song plays, and my memories arrange themselves into a music video. I hate that someone made me feel the lyrics to this, I think to myself. Then, smiling inexplicably, I think again: No, you don’t.
I chat with a drag queen who’s considering leaving New York. She asks about Pittsburgh, and I tell her it’s been a lovely exhale. She tells me the city has lost none of its shine but all of its luster. I wonder, for a moment, about place. Are our homes really evolving so constantly, or do they hold a kind of mirror to our shifting, nebulous want?
She says, like a shrug, I’ll probably stay.
Where else would a couple of beautiful men stumble into the bar and put on an interpretive dance to Enya? On a Sunday?
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I want, more than anything, to be a reliable narrator. In these stories I lug around, encumbered and resolved, I yearn to capture something true. I’m as prone to embellishment as the next poet, though, harboring the requisite delusion to imagine I am the first man to know these feelings up close.
In this way, I am the incurable hoarder. I revisit the library, feeling these pages’ rushes and pains in full color, every time my mind wanders off. My lover tells me I have a thousand-yard stare, and I just chuckle back. The past is a rich neighborhood, humanity alongside all the benefit of retrospect; I imagine conversations of reconciliation and it’s almost as good as having them.
To snap myself out of it, I feverishly chronicle the moment at hand: the rusting tambourine at the back of the shower, my roommate making sauce and balls in a sun dress and stilettos, dates on the laptop watching forgotten gems from my family VHS collection. Pittsburgh is sunshine, golden ale, sports regalia, and hilly walks. One day, you will be nostalgic for exactly this.
Life does indulge in its cinemas, though. On the afternoon we buried my cousin, a train rattled by, hushing us all into a watchful quiet. On the night one of my lovers pulled his hands away, watching me fall away flailing, we were drunk at a quaint dinner in Tarrytown. Everyone’s meal ended abruptly – I only just remembered – when a skunk wandered through.
Sometimes I glance in the mirror and wonder if my handsomest days are behind me. Did I fathom, then, just how beautiful? These days, my hair has grown long and unruly, and I recall what it was to nurture a mane through a pandemic. I’d pronounced 2020 my ‘lion year,’ a declaration blanketed quickly in rusted, dark comedy. I sheared it, on a whim, months into 2021. O, the desperate euphoria of turning a tiresome page.
I comb my fingers through it on a sunny drive, feel it brush my neck and grin. Perhaps these will be the lion days wrenched from my palms in those younger, wide-eyed days. My lover takes me picture in a grassy park, and I know already I will marvel, someday, at what a wondrous thing I was.








