sábado, diciembre 01, 2018

Taking of power


And then the words flow,
Like the brackish water lapping
Dirty river to tumultuous sea.
Not saline, nor sweet, nor fully integrated.
Some other thing.
An unassailable, nameless feeling.
(I think of you and your storms)
I look up at the billowing curtain,
Translucent vermillion,
Backlit in the afternoon.

I’d like to think that I learned everything I needed to
From this failure.
That next time,
Should there be a next time
(There is always a next time)
I will be a better version of myself
A deeper, more generous version,
A less afraid one.

I fear that maybe that’s a little lie I tell myself
To convince me that there’s some comfort
In a world that rips babies from their parents’ arms
In the name of some geopolitical boundaries
That I can neither see nor believe in.
Nor suffer.
(And yet we pretend, shuffling through metal detectors
And radiating our baggage--
The minor indignities of hands patting down our imperfect
Bodies in plain sight.)

I float, retching in a sea,
With each wave of nausea,
I am overcome, I relent, it all falls away.
You never liked when I cried,
And I’m crying now, defiantly, to myself
while the YouTube autoplay Gods
Cleverly play Jeff Buckley, then Linda Ronstadt, then Joan Baez
Then Joni Mitchell, because they know
The particular dimensions of this pain,
(Really, they only aggregate data and then make predictions)
This subterranean, prehistoric pain
That tears through me,
That is leaving.
I want to believe that I can let it go.
I want to let it go.
You say you want simple things,
(But all I ever wanted was to come home to you.)
An imperfect home, to be sure, world-weary and wounded.
And running so no one would notice what’s missing.

I look down at the toilet,
At my hand that cleans,
What’s left behind,
Damn, of course, I’m ovulating.
My face red and mottled,
Made uglier from the salty tears,
Skin puffy and showing my certain age.
And I mourn for all the children I never had,
Never will have
Never got to have
(And all the years of joyfulness that I can’t remember
Or that I do remember and miss,
Her tiny hands clutching mine,
Her belly laugh, her dancing eyes)
Because I was deafened by my own
Ambition
Or drive
Or fear.

I want to learn to listen to my soul,
Not just my body,
Prodded and palpated by physicians,
Debated by politicians and pundits.
I want them to let me be a woman, at night, alone.
(With no questions or comments
Or arched-eyebrow allusions.)
And then I want to do the same for her,
To show her what it really means
To be brave.
To be free.