yesterday my feet rested comfortably on the bar of someone else's chair and my eyelids slid heavy and the world seemed slow a graph of survivorship curves glowing blurry on the whiteboard and then words slid from behind a neatly trimmed white beard ". . . .as our bodies are programmed to die."
as our bodies are programmed to die.
thousands of miles away one gleaming thought against a murky sky (that's how i imagine it anyway--murky, cold, stagnant air) a frantic explosion of lean muscle power and a body launching into the lake.
he was 17 and in that moment gears somewhere in this world shifted, numbers were crunched and some profound device processed the seconds, linking and unlinking them with an automatic, well-oiled certainty
he was 17 and the number on his football jersey suited him like wool socks on winter feet his stride under the lights a weekly prize to all hungry, bleacher-ed, washed-up life-hunters bundled against october-night chill-streaked skies they drank hot cocoa and he took three sips of gatorade
he was 17 and his smile and his curls
and we all hear about hospitals but this feels different because he was 17 and suddenly, instantaneously his body was just a beep and his skin turned the color of the walls
first the ICU painted quick brushstrokes across his wrists then it stopped giving a **** at all
and the water rushed endlessly, heartlessly.
when I shift through memories and find his seven-year old face in my mind, i remember a gap where he'd lost a front tooth and i remember sunlight streaming behind his hair it was valentine's day and he gave me a small smile and a silver charm bracelet in a powder blue box.
i shifted my feet heard the snap of a binder closing and all i could think about was the oversimplification of words and survivorship curves and 17 years
and and
piles of numbers spurting from a computer
and an echo of a splash.
this felt strange for me but for some reason i needed to write it. and though i don't like dedicating or even offering any explanation of my poems, this one's different, so i'd like to say that this one's for MC.Β Β he was a boy that glowed--so bright that even elementary-school me, who didn't know a ******* thing about glowing, figured it out.
they're right, man. they aren't bullshitting anyone when they say you were a selfless hero--you were the minute you entered this world, and even though you moved away years ago i remember you with this strange pang somewhere inside. i wonder if you'd remember me too.