Tuesday, August 20, 2013

We make everything permanent and finite and at the end, we wish we had more time. I remember every day that I thought the sun only slid through the sky because I asked it to, every night that I prayed for light in the morning. We think we make time move forward by sheer force of will, and we lose track of its indifference to us. I know I will see you in two weeks’ time, and yet I am still saying goodbye as though we only ever had yesterday, and the future is a lie our parents told us to stop the crying. We forget about things like second chances, like flowers that sleep all winter and bloom again in the spring. We build concrete boxes in the ground or metal boxes on wheels. We avoid direct sunlight. We avoid everything. We smoke, we drink, we only come out at night. We continually refuse to acknowledge the passage of days, and then we wake up with longer limbs or beards on our faces or families, and we wonder where we’ve been this whole time. As though tomorrow only comes if we ask it to. We forget that there is always plenty, there is always room. We forget that more time means more chances, more goodbyes, more hellos. We are foolish and wasteful, and we will find ourselves at the end of everything, asking for more time, as if we had never been given enough.

Tuesday, August 6, 2013

Unparalleled Recklessness

throw my head back into dust
swirling in the glow of Saturday night
with honeyed whiskey in red cups and
so much that gleamed

and the only thing left from it
is the flush in my cheeks
and a headache

because I remember too much
like your careless breeze
against my face
and a smile that slides sideways slightly
when you've had too much to drink
(which is often almost
 every night)

that honeyed whiskey wasn't
quite sweet enough
to wash you from my mouth, and
nothing really ever is,
apparently

I found out too late
when they pulled my arms aside
to whisper at me urgently and kind
that you have hooked me
line and sinker
still

and they could see me
struggling

see, Saturday night
had me all starry-eyed until
they told me
that I had made a fool of myself

(because when you come at me
 with that careless sideways smile I always
 make a fool of myself)

and the sloppy edges of my mouth
must have looked horribly undone
like I had somehow lost my lips
in my frenzied search
for yours

I have always asked
too much of you

you are warm and thoughtless
and I have pursued your indifference
with unparalleled recklessness
since the last day
you kissed me, but

the only thing left from it
is the flush in my cheeks
and a headache

Friday, August 2, 2013

Gaining Weight Isn't So Bad

when the edges of my skin blurred
I thought I was bloated
from the secrets you kept inside me
but now my curves are wide
enough to ski across, and I feel
broad like summer birds

I have sweated you out
and now the hips I hated so hard
are cultivating fruit trees and sloping
into arches under which
feral cats curl up
and honeycombs grow

my body has expanded
since you last saw it

and I can no longer
feel ashamed of that