I have lost my voice as of late, feeling like prospero living in the island of my mind. Here's an attempt to describe how I pass my time.*
there are moments when the ache overcomes the present the scratching demon inside, selfish for something I can’t pronounce and I find myself swallowing my tears over black coffee, hoping you don’t see.
I look into your hazel eyes and see the frustration with age. you tell me, ‘I hate being old’ and I quietly tell you to embrace your wisdom ‘you’re only old once, nana’ you laugh and I find my place inside your sweet warble as we look around for the keys that you just put in your purse.
the small girl within me reaches out and holds your shoulder lightly guiding you in and out of the slow traffic swimming in southern humidity. everything has slowed down in the past few months the decaying town I grew up in is full of molasses minded folk, and I only wish it was slower as you forget why we are here. We walk into the the cool air and I tell you we needed to leave the house. you’ve been folding the dishes and scrubbing the laundry while my grandfather yells about the TV and his inability to find his mind when they put another persons heart inside his chest. we decide to leave behind the scene of you sobbing in the sink and drink some black coffee.
You and I have sat so many times wrapped in fits of laughter defying the pain of the world. I try to make simple jokes as an excuse to lose ourselves, but my new silence has grown with the summer honeysuckle and I have lost the desire to forget. We sit side by side, watching the black water slide inside the creek. You begin telling me how you finally feel relaxed. I kiss your cheek and tell you I love you. We smile, no longer needing to grasp for breathless laughter. The ache becomes a part of every moment and I breathe in the golden sadness of mortality, knowing that I am learning the art of dying in southern heat of the town I was born.