Your mother’s two hands buckle at her front
like a strapped stone. You curl
your body away like smoke,
melt into his. You don’t know
what to call this feeling-
after-feeling so you say it’s love.
Like a secret set of wings.
No one knows if it’s really there.
Monday, May 18, 2009
Friday, February 27, 2009
Migration
Not the fists he holds tightly at his sides,
not his puffed-out chest bracing wind
or the mast that’s planted behind you both.
You’ll try, but
none of it—not even your arm
slid through his—
will be enough
to stop
this sensation
of falling.
not his puffed-out chest bracing wind
or the mast that’s planted behind you both.
You’ll try, but
none of it—not even your arm
slid through his—
will be enough
to stop
this sensation
of falling.
Thursday, February 26, 2009
Coil, then unravelling
It’s early morning. Sticky summer air
pokes through window-screen holes
onto your curled-up body
like sun rays on a little spore.
Dad pokes his head in
to see if you’re up. You bound
out of bed, uncurl, follow him, full of sweaty, summer dreams,
full of thick sleep.
You’ll get older and keep doing this.
This life of yours, windblown,
will always be like a piece of string
coiling, then unravelling in the wind.
pokes through window-screen holes
onto your curled-up body
like sun rays on a little spore.
Dad pokes his head in
to see if you’re up. You bound
out of bed, uncurl, follow him, full of sweaty, summer dreams,
full of thick sleep.
You’ll get older and keep doing this.
This life of yours, windblown,
will always be like a piece of string
coiling, then unravelling in the wind.
Saturday, February 21, 2009
This is how the world is made
Tuesday, February 10, 2009
Photo paper
We’ll all think the music’s still playing after we go
and we’ll keep singing.
My mother’s smile,
too, will be like a feather she's holding.
It will fall away softly.
We’ll hardly notice.
and we’ll keep singing.
My mother’s smile,
too, will be like a feather she's holding.
It will fall away softly.
We’ll hardly notice.
Sometimes, you wants your life
To be like you remember it in this picture
of you: starched white dress, socked feet on hot grass.
You make the picture a place, you forget
it’s just a picture. Not
any more a thing
than a locket
in the shape of a heart.
I think you can look at a photo long enough that the moment changes in your mind. I think you can also do this without a photo.
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