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Showing posts from July, 2020

First Grade

“Don’t cry,” my mother tells me. I am in first grade, with a pretty knapsack and a lunch she packed me, and first grade always made me cry. “But I want to stay with you.” It was, to my five-year-old self, the most dramatic thing that I had to spend the whole day away from her, and I didn’t understand it. “You’ll be home soon.” -- “Don’t cry,” my mother tells me. It’s a habit that, as a twenty-something year old woman, I pretend I had grown out of. I’m sitting on her couch writing poetry – a piece from San Francisco that would one day become a friend’s housewarming present – and airplanes always made me cry. “I’ll just miss you, that’s all.” “You’ll be home in a few months.” None of us could have predicted a fucking pandemic that had probably already started, or known the next time I’d come back would be almost two years later. -- “I told you not to cry,” but I know she is also crying. She has stage four colorectal cancer, and we both wrote a piece with the exact sam...

The Twilight Time

May I take you somewhere? The twilight time, that in between, where the suspended world meets this one, where the echoes of it all reverberate like laughter saying: I am clay. I know you are afraid to listen to the stillness. My lovely, wounded, beautiful warrior. I am, too. There is power to the softest voice, you know the one: Walking through the wreckage, weeping by the wayside. Hiding in the rain. The voice that can just be, childish and wild and exactly as it wishes, without needing to compete for anything. That voice says: I see you. I’m here. Shielding the strength to let go, From the day the world started spinning so fast it made itself dizzy. I did it for you. Are you running from the loneliness? Chewing the strength of your bones and spitting out ashes. It’s beautiful here.