wring your mismatched hands together they don't belong to you but they're still yours you watch old reels, the war replaying on a silver screen relearning a past you still don't remember (your hair used to be short, but you like it better long) your smile is crooked when you look at him you don't know if it's fondness or hatred (or something in the middle,the point between rage and bone-breaking love) he'll never understand how easy it is to make men into machines but the blueprints for your breathing patterns are hidden away in ones and zeroes in the back of your mind your tongue and teeth are stained with your old body, ten thousand lifetimes ago you still feel your arm sometimes ghost aches haunting your every step when you close your eyes you see an ashtray, blood filling your eyesockets like saltwater you've forgotten about that night (1942, the war playing in the background as you looked at him, soft around the edges) stars falling from his palms into your chest you're an ampersand, your fingers interlocked with his when you ask him what it was like (you aren't sure what you mean, but he is) he says, soft around the edges,okay and it's enough war isn't pretty, it's a tragedy and so are you but it's enough for now press your fingers into the sway of his back cough russian winter into his lungs and try to forget about it
i think it is fairly obvious what this poem is about