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Christopher Sep 2018
I saw a bird today.
Perched on my balcony,
His green feathers fluttered
In the humid September wind
While his gaze fixed on clouds
Tattered in tomorrow’s grey hues.
I peered closer through half-shut
Blinds to conceal myself as his
Own plumage disguised him
In the backdrop of a tree.
I’ve never seen this bird before.
Not here,
Not anywhere.
He was silent and still,
And how unusual I thought
For nature’s choir to be quiet.
Why do you not chirp, I asked,
As any happy bird would?
“I cannot sing alone,” he said
“You would not understand
The ballad I cry without a duet
To capture my highest highs
And resonate my lowest lows.”
Well why do you not dance, I queried,
As you surely should?
“My dance is a dance for two.
I need a partner to swing on
Invisible drafts, rhyming
My cadence lest I’ll forget
The steps and miss the count.”
So why do you not sing or dance
With all the other birds here, I begged?
Life is dull without passion
That floods the lungs
And ignites the limbs
To expression.

A pause.

“Simply, I cannot see them.
The red one melts in crimson dusk.
The blue one soars high in clear skies
And the yellow one wears the sun’s mask.
But the green one, I can see.
Only she can hear my muted cues
To bellow our loudest whistles
And only she can feel my subtle signals
To whirl beneath my wings.
I crave the same feather
Where words blend at the seams
And propel us through graying clouds
With our airwaves tortuously in sync
Leaving a duplex trail that intertwines.
So believe me, I am looking for her.
I’ve been searching for a long time.
But I think I’ve finally found the zephyr
She is riding, and I’ve traveled
A long way to be exactly here
Where our currents are bound to collide.”
I saw a bird for the first time today.
"To really know what an apple is, to be interested in it, to understand it, to converse with it is really seeing it. Gazing at it for a while, and observing its shadow, feeling its every curve, turning it around, taking a bite out of it, imagining the sunlight absorbed in it. That is really seeing it. If you really see something, you can feel something naturally like water gathering in a spring. You should prepare paper and a pencil and wait for the moment to come.” – Poetry (film), 2010
Christopher Aug 2018
I wait for the day
when the trees grow taller
and the sun grows warmer,
winter coming to an end,
inviting bright spring days
with the promise of summer winds
ushering us on their current,
lulling us to ride our ways home
to the branch we first set perch.
Today, the wind pulls you yet
to higher trees and warmer skies,
climates too warm for the thick feathers
cluttering my wings, but
perfect for your flight North
farther and farther away.
Perhaps one day our currents may collide
mixing ecstatic cries and whistles
when we are ready to sing together
a different duet of rosy blues
once more.
The feeling of being left behind when change is inevitable.
Christopher Jun 2018
I remember death
not by the pitting feeling of gravity
swallowing my stomach,
or the nausea that ensues
as the vertigo sets in,
or the narrowing vision preempting
liquid legs that spill
and overflow as I am drowned
by the darkness that will never cease
for them
laying forever still
at my knees.

No, I do not remember death
for how it burdens my soul.
These deaths are not mine to bear –
I merely shoulder the toll they exact
for but a few minutes,
sometimes nights, weeks, or even months.
I’ve lost count again and again and again.

They are not mine to bear.
They are not mine to bear.
They are not mine to bear.

I remember death instead by those survived
when one is extinguished,
like the amber lights that cease to spin,
the defibrillator that powers down,
the sweaty brows that unfurl and dip,
and the valiant hopes that wane.
I remember death most by those
resigned to hear the last words
I have to offer.

To the grandchildren on the phone
speeding forty minutes away too late
to share this woman’s last meal.
the charred turkey smell lingers deep
into our hungry lungs as we breathe
in and out
into her for the last time.
I’m sorry, but there is nothing more we can do.

To the son frozen while his father hollers,
rapping and tapping on the walls
just as I rap and tap on your mother’s chest
with waning form and speed.
I can only imagine who you were to her.
Her only child, her world, her life.
And yet,
I’m sorry, but we did our very best.

To the daughter singing the alphabet
while your father lay still just past that office door.
At not even six years old, you don’t whimper
when we all fall silent as your father’s heart
remains even after the shocks.
Would it be torture or mercy to lie?
I’m sorry, but your daddy is never coming home.

To the father blaming himself
for all those years he cannot take back,
trying to break past the deputies
and cut the rope suspending his son,
white in the face, blue in the toes.
I’m sorry, but the damage done is final.

To the concussed mother gripping onto life
in the trauma room next to your daughter,
broken and bruised courtesy of the drunk
driver who impaled your car,
who impaled your little girl.
We tried when we knew we’d fail.
I’m sorry, but we did everything we could.

To the wife running out of her house to find
her husband shot sixteen too many times
staining the grass she tried so hard to revive
in this never ending drought.
A mix of his brightest and darkest reds
seep down from the backboard
and into the brittle roots.
I’m sorry, but there’s absolutely nothing we can do.

It’s not death that eats away at me,
a quart of blood or a pound of flesh
for an ounce of soul.
I remember death, instead,
by the faces of those left alive.
of those left to live
with nothing
but my last words.

I’m sorry, but it’s over.
From my days working as a paramedic for Los Angeles.

— The End —