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Showing posts from August, 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...

Tell Me What is Left

Tell me what is left When you’ve scraped away everything. Cherished dinners, frantic schedules, beloved coffee gatherings. The time you played beside the pier, The time I got drunk and leapt from the rooftops. Once you’ve chiseled away the last of your strength, And, bare-boned and exhausted Stared into the swell of things we fear the most - And drank too deeply. Beyond the sink full of dishes at 2 in the morning, Beyond the floors that will never come clean. Once you’ve broken every boundary, And built empires from the fragments. Darling. Speak to me from this space. When you’ve unslept all the sleepless nights Building monoliths from memories We’ll sit in the half-formed structures, sharing coffee. This new space is stable. Forged of the feelings that endured when nothing else did Holding as their cornerstones the shards that survived shattering.