You are dead and you made us in that hospital. That lump of flesh in the pit of you: clay. With your hands you grasped it, pulled into yourself: mouth: umbilical. Like a snake consuming itself. This is what they mean when they say that circles are perfect. The water was warm. It snowed outside for days. I visited my sister and wondered about brains. She speaks of her therapist as a friend. I speak as if I don't know I am a person and imagine the rush of light in each of our heads. The heady fire revealed in MRIs. The showerhead can barely contain the steam and nothing cools me off. Back to our younger years in the libraries when we were still constructing ourselves. You said such lovely things that when you died it felt like deaf. I can no longer
hear
you singing. Except now, I grasp at the hard body of a psychology textbook, reading, some exam tomorrow-- listen, you could've come to Harvard, too, if that is what you wanted, if your body would let you-- and your quiet suggests the problem is that I am stuck in the frame of my
nakedness cross-legged bottomed
laughing souped into the bottom
of the shower curtains: and they open: the steam: the still
images of sliced brains in my textbooks: coffee-cups
emptied by the lips I have taken from you: quiet,
yes, no wonder why. When your hands
did their last thing, when they reached into your own mouth to spool yourself into you and the books we sent you that you couldn't read because you were dissolving
When your hands
did that: did you think: could you: and if you could: do you think that was what made you: you the whole time? Or was it: the departing of the air: as if to sigh: when it gets so cold outside that every whisper: feels monumental because: you can see: the clouds: you speaking before you: before: your own eyes. And then you blink
for a very long time in a single still flutter, stuck.