Isn't it strange living in another person's head? It's like Being John Malkovich, or Anne Sexton as I rode along with her wild rides into sand at the beach, lost in Boston again, inside a mind that was different but still mine because I saw that very street lamp she did, and in her advice to me, that yet unborn memory that would never be, I heard her words in soft puffs of nicotine-scented tickles in my ear, warm air before young lungs had ever breathed in, and I cried because she was speaking to me, though she never knew it when the words clattered from that old Remington like a machine gun- I was just an idea she never really had, a wish in soft feathery hair on the chest of man she shared lust with as he slept, not knowing he would father a specter delivered from a womb that had closed for business. Our walks along an asylum lawn, returning waves to suspicious grass, green oceans to get lost in after sewing leather wallets from our own hardened skins as if projects could ever fix the worlds of sin we lived in, pandering doctors offering officious pretense of cure against the sweet furies of sunrises, sunsets, earth worms and *****. So, can I cry having crossed a divide into another, for moments residing in the soul and belly of a mother who was never mine, though I feel her pain as if we own it together?