March is just another ache – to be thought of, held in beauty longer than my beauty holds, I wonder, do you still remember the way my smile found you in those hallways we stumbled into, haphazard becoming, so very simple to find a poem among the blossoms of our aching hope, white-knuckle stubborn, the stains beauty pressed into the wallpaper.
Sun splashes the sidewalk and the optimists dress for the beach, yet by evening the cynics will cackle, snowflakes bundled like an onslaught of tiny parachuters, we scramble beneath awnings and watch, pant, through the eyes we had as children, counting down, three, to the sprint, two, the burning of, one, breath, go.
In black, in white, my grandmother loses herself in her Westerns, I watch her watching, wonder how she houses her hope, her grief, her infinite stories, I remember her prayers all those bedtimes, bits of Crayola in a cookie tin, I want her to know I still hold her, young, awake, wanting for more light in the day, wonder if her eyes looked like this as a girl, watching Westerns.
Remember how, by evening, the grass swelled turquoise? Jeans stained green at the kneecaps, tuckered out, the sliding door and we were home? Remember everyone you loved just within reach? The light, incandescent, spilling out into the world?
I’m not one to gnaw my fingernails, but I get the curb appeal of a harmful habit. I never picked up cigarettes or floored it in my car just to see what a hundred miles per hour feels like. Lifetime, I’ve bought two lottery scratchers, and neither gave me a dime or a thrill.
No, none of these are my vices. My flesh has found another pathway entirely to turning in on itself.
I keep, in romantic detail, account of everything I’ve ever lived through. The first kiss on an orange couch, the searing abruptness of harsh words on a subway platform. The shock, somatic, of a rolled ankle pulling me to concrete. The hollow disappointment of people who hugged me hello two weeks ago willfully averting their eyes at the dance hall.
It’s a writer’s impulse, I tell myself. But then I walk with my lover on a sunny afternoon, and a memory rinses over me in vivid color. And there I am, telling it, recounting some bruising bit of history, and his eyes fall, downcast.
Why did I tell that story?
Life has granted me my wisdoms, one of them being that anybody who causes me harm is probably busy warding off hellhounds all their own. I’m wise enough to know I shouldn’t clench my firsts around anger, so I wrench them loose, let things free.
Yet remembering is time travel. Reliving those pages, even the yellowed ones, scrapes these scars raw. And, all over again, I am indignant, bruised, yearning, wanting.
All around me, the world seems to usher itself right along. The noodle shop on 53rd Street becomes a deli, the new tenants next door proudly proclaiming it their bodega. New albums hit the radio, and I’m obsessing over a track from 2014, my throat catching, remembering how it coaxed me to run when my body felt like buckling.
–
It’s summer in New York City, and I’d never admit it to you, but my spirit is a dishtowel, worn. I am waterlogged, wrung out, and haphazardly hung to dry. I am contorted, rigid in both my aching and my denial. I have become fluent in the language of insisting.
I’m really all right, I say, impressing tableside company. I know exactly what I’m doing.
At Fire Island, a man who waged war to bring me back ignores me all day. I don bright sunglasses and a pink coat, invincible in my indifference. I read a book by the pool and bask in the magic of place. Night falls, and we see a drag performer, a dynamo. She spins on her heels, black lights and neon, and we roar. We leave to go dancing, feeling young and infinite. Vodka soda with a splash of cran. Everything, gently rinsed in burgundy.
I turn and see him, passionately kissing someone new. I pour half of my drink between my lips, swallowing daggers as I do. I’ve been here before, I insist, it only hurts if I let it. I inhale and exhale, long, dancing among boys who are watching me for signs of distress. It hurts, so I rinse my tongue in fizz and bite. I toss the plastic cup and decide to walk home, night sky and boardwalk planks.
When I get home, I say very little, brushing my teeth the recommended three minutes. I crawl into bed, finally alone and unwatched, and I sob into a pillow. Before I know it, sleep has pulled me under. I hear none of the pool party happening outside. Hours of moonlight missed.
Light stirs me awake, and I see that it’s 5:30 in the morning. I turn, discovering he never came home. Anxiety jolts through my body like lightning, pulling me to my feet. This is a violation, and I am sliced right open. I fumble with my phone, uncertain of where to start. I walk to the bathroom, catch my face in the mirror, and I point an index finger at myself: You fucking idiot. You stupid, stupid boy.
Disgusted, I walk outside to the patio. The air feels warm, heavy with rumors of last night’s misadventures, and I am solitary in my waking. Restless, I decide on a course of action: I’m going to sit in the hot tub, eyes closed, and listen to august by Taylor Swift.
As the song starts, however, I see figures stir in my periphery. My boyfriend, naked, walking up the steps to our rental, and the bar guy, pulling on clothes and exiting through the greenery. The details are irrelevant now; I keep my eyes shut and shift my focus toward the water bubbling against my shoulder blades.
I feel a palm clasp against my shoulder, and I startle. He is here, and his eyes meeting my eyes breaks me. I collapse immediately into sobs. Come to bed, he says.
You didn’t come home, I stammer. My tears sting hot, my pride in shreds around me. I can’t believe that.
He insists I come back up; I ask for some time. He leaves, and I wait there, broken. At some point, I climb out, pat dry, replace the hot tub cover, climb the steps, slip quietly back into that room.
–
I humbly ask: What good does this story bring me?
When I relive it, I ache. I am embarrassed for myself, sad that this wasn’t the chapter that led me to break free and run ’til my lungs fucking burned. Against my sternum, I feel anger bloom for a man who hasn’t touched me in years, which quickly gives way to sadness. I did not cure his loneliness, and I barely survived the attempt.
The details proliferate. This is one of a hundred stories I carry around, indexed to this love and its bruises. I know the next story is a birthday fight, one where I anxiously pick my first manicure loose, leaving shreds of aquamarine against the boards. I know this crushing affair ends in a Chinese restaurant, where my hand is brutally held to the stove for the thousands ways I come up short. That, after the crush of goodbye, he invites me into a limp hug, and this anticlimax is the perfect ending. I know that I don’t shed a single tear after he leaves, and that this is because his presence was where my all my heartbreak was housed.
Sometimes, I convince myself that holding these stories grants my writing a more vivid palette. That, because I have known emotions like these firsthand, mine is a company marked by deeper compassion, reluctant judgment. I wonder if, by sharing, I open the gate for someone else to feel less alone in their own story.
Other times I wonder if I’ve grown far too fond of these bruises, war wounds aching with the change of the weather. Does my poetry live and die on the freshness of my pain? If not for the crush of living and wanting and the narrow survival, what story do I really have to share?
I hope there is hope. I insist that there is, underline it in adamant red, but I am like the other ministers: The songs I sing most convincingly are the ones I need the most.
but February was never endless, the held breath shaky in the cavernous wait, our pupils opening like church doors at the lavender of morning, we were tender when we were outlasting, weren’t we?
Remember the first Pittsburgh morning, jostled you from the dark to bear witness to my breaking, spilling myself across the page between chapters, and again in Manchester I shook you to steal another hour together, overlap our limbs and revel in some nonsensical hour, the knowing came quiet and ridiculed all the thunderstorm romances before.
If I’ve loved you, I have the perfect story of your joy, can light you up in the minds of strangers–beautiful, ephemeral, human–I dutifully usher a sparkle of delight, a swell of pain, lovely, by habit fastidious keeper, hoarding every detail of anybody who made one of these days worthwhile, flowering constantly in the rain, wind, and fire of all these nights and their constant surrender to morning.
Dublin pulls on like beloved gloves I’d forgotten I lost, familiar, warm, wandering into the grocery and pondering the produce like a man who owes this city rent, how to explain this hobby? Trying on lives and delighting in the momentary infinite, grinning in make-believe connection toward the woman who allows my cutting her in line, o neighbor, my sister!
Sad if true, I am always homesick for somewhere, for cornfield summers, for a campus emblazoned in autumn’s yearning goodbyes, the hard-earned scrape of New York fucking City, homesick for the dog who died without one more forehead whisper, for the bruises of lovers who drenched my poetry in somatic wounds, dilation of pupils under the pink-lit glow of fever, forever,
goddamn it, I
find euphoria in the stacking of worlds, hoarded memory wedged between homes I’ve pretended were mine, jerk off before bed and kiss my palm goodnight, even the grief tastes like glory spread across lives like these, my wandering wants, aid and abet, drifting loose as the dream we fight to pinpoint.
I remember those days in visceral red, blood pearls surfacing, the startle of skin interrupted, recall my feet hammering the stairwells as I chased you toward shrieking trains, sun-soaked parties, the constant wanting of skin, pills in our palms, a ritual, salud!
You liked to split our meals by halves, so I split myself accordingly, asking for less, wanting less, needing nothing, scraping my knuckles bloody to prove myself a good sport, long walk home, alone, measuring my hurt in avenues, waiting for your reach to quell the indigo bruising.
Glances of pity from two boys splitting pita, your fury a sharp-edged thing, only later would I discover all my poems of you featured glass, in prisms and prison, I could not stop you until I sobbed, broken, finally.
Ah, those days are over, places so far out of reach, it’s been years, and time peeled the scabs free, but I go on remembering, you the hurricane, collision, moonlight dancer winking just before you leave me to want in the dark.
I want for the crackle of backyard fire, the spilling racket of amber into the wanting mouths of glass mugs, the clink of company, the way friends exhale when geographies subside, how time stretches itself out, hound sighing softly against the well-worn rug.
One day, I whisper, we will be old men grown bored of all our answers, craving the very questions that weary us now, pull us awake in wonder, keep us hungry for breath, we should be savoring the pens wobbling, desperate for the page, in our shaking hands.
Remember the year you made home of the treetops? Decades of cave dwelling and your eyes flooded the moment you drank the sunset in the air of some canopy. I was there, watching in wonder before either of us knew how to walk such a skyscape, remember the thunder and how it drowned in our laughter? Remember?
Cat prints in the concrete, I stop and marvel, joy in tiny thunders, accidental permanence achieved unawares, the air so frigid but magic so warm it’s worth unburying rosy knuckles for the photo.
My hope is a matchstick trembling in hurricane days, I harbor it fiercely, when my laughter breaks free, I forget the way the television set got them addicted to their anger, the red hat hatred, the bellowing yelp insisting ‘it must be their fault my dreams died in my wanting arms,’ I revel in the revolution of belting Celine Dion in a sea of men who grew up afraid to speak above a whisper, we will hear the death rattle to this wrathful cacophony, will be dancing still.
How do I ensure my life remains a love letter to hope and not fury? Fumbling fingers, I practice my penmanship, community, gratitude, joy, belonging, light, we can always start the song again, we.
The mall is America, is a liminal space, is a graveyard who has no idea everything she holds has died, and the stores soldier on, unawares, paint chips carving makeshift geographies over the merchandise, defaulted promises on the premises, everything must go, a pizza shop pretends not to notice his neighbors have died and gone, his whistling echoes long into the empty arcade.
My family dog is an old man now, I lie on the carpet beside him, cradling his face in one hand and running the other along his trembling ribcage, I cannot make him young so I try to remind him somehow of his mother.
Inescapable, time, but lovely is the stillness, if we let it, if we dare give it the room, let it settle over us and settle our debts and doings, notice, really notice, the minutes running their hands across our tender bodies.
At the gas station, fathers whose knuckles bear scars from years on a factory floor scratch tickets, hope momentarily awash in bleak fluorescence, flashes of soft sand beaches or red-chrome freedom or something to hand their sons before the anchor drowns them, too –
You know what really trickles down?
When she degrades her own body, pushing her plate away and cutting herself apart in harshness, jokes and complaints piling up in the gaze of her daughter, discovering and pinching her little stomach in wilting privacy;
or he toils, for years, at a job that breaks him of dreaming, drowning the day’s weight in pop-tab beer, amber medicine, seething in violet rage at the notion that an immigrant might dream, might want, too;
or their concept of god, who is perhaps said to love, but whose most clamorous devotees revel in the anguish of the oppressed, recoil from the image of a kiss between men, make excuses for brutish, stupid men and their brutish, stupid messes.
I plead guilty, his epitaph by the hundred in my handwriting, memory saltwater gargled in the name of healing, but I welcome the visceral sting, cinematic flashback to all his wanton brutalities –
Sobbing in a hot tub, finally broken, unruly horse accepting the limits imposed by cruel fingertips, the sinking, cooling epiphany, alone and disposable, sexual revolution a skin-broken lie: I waited, pleasant fool, for the long-promised amory.
If I let myself remember the roll of an ankle, I squirm in my chair, instinctive recoil, so perusing the pages I penned in your name makes me pine to chain you to a chair, listen and know the weight of your unbearable loneliness, empty ache of your counterfeit care.
So many miles between me and the days I welcomed the bruise of your company, but I remember, the poet’s curse, the tongue always travels to the tooth’s jagged edge, so I write and rinse and spit.