Irreconcilable (ars poetica) (love poem)
Clumsy Metaphor
a glass dropped
on kitchen floor
swept into dustpan
assembled
into a human body
by a human body
this is how desire
this is how
my life spent
broken spilled
how I bleed
at the edge of you
Ode to the Oceans’ Many Plastic Patches
disappointing-ass way to kill the planet if you ask me
no music in it at all
what if instead convenience
wasn’t god
when I was eleven I joined the world
learned all the wrong lessons
about what matters
still unlearning
(not really)
mostly my problems have to do with hunger
mostly my problems have to do
I don’t litter
haven’t littered
in years but there was a brief period
when I bought cigarettes on my way home from work
did not smoke them
threw the pack out the window mistaking
this for freedom
I guess I got away with it
anyway the idea of these plastic patches
it’s fucking terrible
shittiest detritus of the shittiest century
look the numbers are too big for a body to hold
gyre of waste three times the size of France
how big can France even be
I did learn to slice the rings from a six-pack
still do
for the seals, you know
mistake is thinking we can save anything
such pleasure in not smoking
only if you have the cigarettes in your hand first
don’t mean to sound hopeless
don’t know how else to end this
don’t know how else it ends
Ode to My Stupid Mouth
My mouth has no idea we’re in a pandemic.
My mouth cannot stop dreaming about sex.
My mouth’s fatal flaw is hunger. My mouth
is the maple limb that storm-splintered
into the backyard overnight, wrecking nothing.
It is a sidewalk splattered with wet forsythia petals,
sticky & fading. It is the lightning,
the thunder, the drench. My mouth is not the same age
as the rest of my body. The rest of my body
is a paper sack of bleached flour —
it cannot be refolded neatly, cannot stop spilling.
My mouth is a map of all my desire, is the red circle
around the towns I have lived in,
is beauty mark & mole, bite & scar
& bitter grudge. It remembers everything.
My mouth is a country that cannot stop
hurting its citizens. My mouth is ghost,
monster, dinosaur. The rest of my body
curls into quarantine but my mouth is outside
looking for someone to kiss. My mouth
will promise anything you ask,
go anywhere you want it to. My mouth
is responsible for every lie I’ve ever told,
my mouth wants to confess & be forgiven
as if that is love: tonguing language
into the world in hopes it comes back changed.
With Great Fanfare I Present You the Key to the City and This Is What Happens
apparently my body is a city
like all cities it was once new and small and made sense
like all cities it evolved over the ages
sprawl and addition
accumulation of choices that made sense at the time
a history’s worth of whispers
deep inside the city are cobblestones
archways
narrow alleys
I’m difficult to navigate
yet you stride with great confidence
as though you’ve been here before
know exactly where you’re going
at the center of the city a park
in that greenspace a tree
ancient black trunk
spider-limb and silhouette
the tree bears a single piece of ripe fruit
the fruit is my heart
do not pick it I say
but you say picking fruit keeps the tree healthy
you slice it into thirds
drizzle each slice with honey
one for the birds you say
one for you to carry on your journey home
you hand the last slice to me
say eat and I do
For So Long, I Was Foolishly Proud of The Scar on My Thumb
I wanted to be a man
until I met enough men
to know better. The pain
of understanding that arrives too late
is the teeth of handsaw
against skin, a mistake
while dragging away limbs
after a storm; I rend
my flesh like wax,
a wound that’s worse
when I look at it. My own blood,
the white of my bone
exposed. Bleached, dying
coral. Ashed-over desert,
one dry lakebed
after another. I thought
I was helping. I thought
I was restoring order. I have
no excuse for the damage
I have done. Men are killing
the world. My skin will heal.
Will knit a pale contrail
across the smaller sky of my body.
Will still be the skin of a man.
Nice
is what we say to each other when words fail —
nice. That was nice. This has been nice. Nice.
What percentage, do you suppose, of people,
upon the occasion of their 69th birthday,
celebrate with a 69? Surely each person
thusly intertwined believes
in that wet-hot moment that their play
on words, their particular entanglement
of pun and pleasure must be unique
on all the planet. Is it disappointing
when you’re not the first to have an idea?
You’re not even the only person
right now with your face buried
in the flesh of someone you love
or love enough, at least, to share
this brief time. We say it
after weddings and funerals: that was
a nice service. So unoriginal,
this fussing we do over love and death,
hunger and grief, but original’s
not the point. Our bodies
were born for this. To crave
and end. When someone my age dies
after an illness I wonder
about the last time they had sex.
I wonder about grief that has time
to rise that way, slowly, the body
growing used to its inevitable end, not
acceptance or anything like that, no,
but understanding, maybe. I wonder
about their spouse, how it feels
to watch such loss approaching
like the world’s slowest
most terrible train
and then when it does arrive
it tornadoes past with a roar
and rush and then even then
despite so much warning
you must stand there
as if at a suddenly emptied station
staring out at empty tracks
thinking, I thought — I thought
there was more time. I thought
we’d have more. What was it like,
the last time they touched,
this couple? In my imagined version
of their love, it’s all gentle
and grieving, full of awareness
of the body’s fragility but I hope
I’m wrong. I hope
it was sweaty and exhausting.
I hope it erased the world
for a moment. I hope it was
more like a first time than a last,
and here I guess I’m betraying
my own desire for feeling new,
for the sense that my body
is an island being discovered
by a shipwreck survivor
so eager for solid ground
and sustenance, so thirsty
for fresh water — I’m being
ridiculous but that’s the point,
I want it to be ridiculous
the way it was when we
first broke the rules together,
caught up in the miracle
that is mouth and finger,
touch and twist and nothing exists
outside of these bodies,
this room, this slaking
until we can barely breathe,
until the only tense is present,
until we look at each other
in shyness at the abandon,
how we just revealed
so much about ourselves
and now here we are,
uncovered, reaching
for language to share
but words fail, that’s what
I’ve been trying to say,
so, darling, come, stand wordless
with me at this window
and let us hold each other
and gaze at the world,
the morning rising,
the day that can go on without us.
To Empty Myself Upon This Earth Like the Clouds
It’s raining but eventually it won’t be.
Not raining but eventually it will.
Tempted, I walk outside
one grey, wet step after another,
following hunger. Someone
recently told me not everyone
longs like this. Can’t imagine.
Each cloud contains the pulse
of the stars behind it. There is only
one cloud, obscuring only all,
backlit by the moon. Always
I wear this raincoat of desire
and ash. You are so far away.
Ode to Infidelity
it’s only ever been you but jesus there are so many versions of me
climbing into this bed every night
they say people behaving extravagantly want to be caught
all I want is to be held
what are you looking for when you climb onto me
what late-night sounds wake you
is it too warm in here
is it me
I’m calling no one else’s name
no one else is answering
all I want is you to look at me
tell me something true
about this life we’ve built
one slow rhyme after another
one small patient lie at a time
one warm-hot night at a time
tell me I’m right
about what it means to be touched
Love Poem
There’s a song with your name in it
but I can’t listen to it
with anyone else in the room.
You slide your fingers
into my mouth and pull out
another word for this lake
we’ve made of our lives.
Each summer it goes drought-dry:
cracked field of mud,
surface of a strange planet.
What is left to say
about such distance?
What to say about rain
that our bodies don’t already know?