I took out a pen and some paper, looseleaf, Not worth the words I sponged onto it but it’ll do I wrote down my feelings about everything The silence of people on a subway ride to work The closest star to us that isn’t the Sun How the Bermuda Triangle got its shape and why the other ones Weren’t cut out for it Were it not for the clocks in my room, serving as reminders That time still existed and would far outlive me I swear I would have written forever I swear I would have
Sometimes I would write letters to friends and never send them Instead cram them into envelopes and into larger envelopes And stack them in the fireplace, under the wood And sometimes light it, other times just hold out my hands And feel invisible warmth
The ones I did send, though, felt hollow Words typed or written but not the words I needed Or wanted To say then. I’d rather ask you how your day was than to receive A strange ****** expression because a question concerning Cosmic dust and how it rushes together to create man Doesn’t really serve as a good icebreaker. Most of the unsent letters were to you You and the clouds that guide you around, shifting rain Back toward the sky
I wrote how are you today? And meant I want you to keep auditioning for dance because you’re wonderful I wrote doesn’t this weather feel strange? And meant get a bigger umbrella so I can be under it too We should try to go for dinner We need to have an excuse to be together Are tattoos a bad thing? Look, topics to occupy us My house is empty tonight Where are you so late and what do you think about? I miss the vase we sold I miss you I feel like today is longer than yesterday and will be shorter than tomorrow I miss you
And they stacked, one upon the other The spaces between each squeezed under the weight of the next The weight of the words compounded more than the previous Filling the spaces of my apartment to the point where I could not see out the windows
“Today is Monday the 16th. To whom it may concern, I’ve contemplated the ideas laid before me and can finally take confidence that I’ve chosen the right one. Many people say that virtuosity is next to solace and I believe that. Many people also claim that it takes a life to learn how to live, and I believe that too. I’ve so many things to say to everyone, even the people I’ve only met once or twice. But those people are just as important.
I can hear echoing between the televisions between the open rooms. The same words delayed by seconds but still audible and clear. The reactions aren’t echoed, they’re different, variant on the person and how they feel about it. To make sense of my claim, I guess it’s just a matter of perspective, and now my perspective is clear, and now I want it to echo between the people to whom I send these letters. Whether the variation between reactions will be the same or not I am all-around unclear, but I know the reactions may have enough weight to keep me held to the ground, or even a bit lower than that. Either way, I’ve spent my life reacting to things as if acting on an echo. I want to change the channel now. I want to close my door so the sound can fill the room and make the stacks of unsent letters shudder. I want to keep it there and turn the air the color of the closest star to us other than the Sun. I want to-“
I wanted a lot of things, to do and to say But that letter and those that followed joined the others in the quiet spaces Spaces which kept the frays of this life muffled and still Like an ocean scooped into a bucket Or the world’s smallest word Backspaced by one letter