I want you
to know that I forgot
the memory I wanted to expound upon here,
the tears I never cried make it difficult to dryly
blot the pages.
I suppose you know I never loved you, but
more meaningfully, I hope you now see how trifling and hollow
love is. Like a warm Spring day, love means nothing but the
nearing embrace of a dying star.
I want you to know what I'm referring to
in this line. It's called "astronomy." It seems to hold the
attention of other mystics, such as her.
But I want you
to know
that it's just about gravity and
luminosity and
what our star hasn't got, but
others have.
The wind blows my page as I'm writing this standing on
my porch, and I fail to
Look up. My hand holds down the dry, decaying
tree pulp in an attempt to stabilize the
metaphor for
Life
your absence has become.
When the dead leaves of last Fall rattle, I can see you there,
running past the chain-link fence containing me and the
tennis surface.
It would be weeks before sweat dripped from my nervous
head as we jumped up and down while others slow danced.
And then I wake up in my new apartment in a city
you've never been to and remember jumping was only me. It's been seven years, but
I still have my diploma from that early graduation--
it's above my fridge so I can ignore it every time I
reach inside
To drink the cool water and
remember the things I should have learned
and the time I ran fast, back
to your host parents' so I could use the bathroom
without you knowing, because my stomach was convulsing.
And maybe what I meant to say is that the earth's on
its yearly sojourn which brings me to that place-- that group of folding chairs
and the endless line of cows dancing slowly past the podium with nothing
but a piece of paper that tells them "you were once here."
It takes me on the highway, past my father's farms to that
man-made reservoir that irrigates them. It amuses Nebraskan farm boys
that the girls that ride along seem to know the way
better.
But you weren't from Nebraska, and you only knew the way
in water, in the bikini I helped you choose at target-- I don't remember the hue.
Your skin looked amazing and warm
transplanted, prairie-grass nestled gently on your supple thighs
under my grasping hands which held on firmly yet
were knocked off with the jolt as you spurred our gas-powered sea-horse, laughing
as we both sped off from our island rendezvous and
became oblivious of my self.
MMXII
I called this exchange student I knew in high school "Diva." It means goddess in Sanskrit,
so I thought I was being Multi-Kulti.
She left me with a lot of **** on my boots.