It was Freddie Hubbard on the trumpet blowing on about some blue moon, as if the yellow one that has occupied the night and sometimes morning sky wasn’t enough, when I decided to write a poem about thinking about tomorrow.
How I will rise before the rest, run a few miles on a treadmill overlooking a busy boulevard and read the private memoirs of a justified sinner. And when the tomorrow that I was thinking about comes with its new minutes and hours, its new obstacles and
headaches, I will think back to today and remember the morning kiss you gave, the silence between your body and mine, the amount of times you changed your outfit before the lake, the museum: the live dances from cultures around the world that kept us from
viewing new installments, the interracial ballet dancers tip-toeing to a tune well-known to childhood ears. But the one memory of yesterday that will be with me until death do us part will not be of the Shakespeare that I read nor of the raspberry cheesecake we shared but of you: sitting alone,
waist-deep in a bubble bath. ******* pert and motherly exposed. Resting comfortably above your ribcage. Showing more beauty than age. A glass of cabernet sitting where the razors and shampoo usually sat. A young adult novel in the white palms your small hands. But yes. The one
memory that will be with me until death do us part and well, even after that, will be of me looking at you: naked in a tub, your glasses over the bridge but on the edge of your nose, and the rest of my life