Fine Thank You and How Was Your Day?

river in November light between bare woods and mountain
We were joking about shadow bodies, doppelgängers, 
our bodies that don't quite feel awake until they
have washed their faces and drank at least a cup
of strong dark coffee. My doppelgänger ordered
a coffee that the student barista made behind
the counter, but with nondairy milk because of
lactose intolerance and because though I love
coffee, too much sometimes trips up the acidity
in my stomach. Yet I drink it all day long, I
nurse my one cup of coffee and make it last, or
my shadow self will make myself another cup at home
later in the evening because oh god she just loves
the smell of coffee. I've been thinking of the body
as a kind of garden, luxuriant with texture and
scent, dotted with underground caves where fireflies
sequin the water. Not that garden in the first story
of exile where a snake in the grass wasn't there
to play but brought a non-multiple choice test and
a loaded answer key. My body doesn't feel like its
core is merely a leftover rib or an afterthought.
So many mornings my body might feel like a mess
of limbs and thinning hair, callused heels, creaking
knees. But I would rather be a constellation of lights
winking at the edge of the ceiling, festive beyond
the holidays— wouldn't you? In the Bolivian restaurant
where the tamales are warm and the sauce is creamy
with a hint of heat, my body sinks into the orange
bucket seat and feels short as a child, but it knows
it couldn't wait to get out of the office. Someone makes
a joke or a pun. Can't even remember how exactly it went
now— divot, diva, treble, trouble?— but enough to produce
a grand cackle. Funny how little plates of food and a little
drink of something nice with friends is so restorative, even
in this little city by the coast where sometimes it snows
but mostly it floods and likely you'd have to travel
somewhere to ski down the bright, powdered sides
of mountains and breathe in the cold, lacerating
air that says Do you feel that, do your lungs and
the rest of you remember when last you felt so alive?

Self-Portrait as Late Bloomer with Nudibranch

river in November light between bare woods and mountain
No, that isn't a piece of frilly green
lettuce in the aquarium but a slug
which stores chloroplasts from the algae
it feeds on. Its cells continue to photo-
synthesize light energy, so it's no longer
just the dull color of putty but suddenly
the most fabulous creature in the room.
I was never that kind of head-turner,
only the girl sitting in the back
of the room, the one with the sensible
shoes and the sensible clothes made by
her mother, never bought off the rack
from some department store. One year
in high school, the trend was apple
clogs and Faded Glory jeans— the ones
with the tiny buckle below the rear
waistband. I tried to take notes on color
combinations, accessories, the difference
between trying too hard and effortless. I guess
some of us are just late bloomers. There are
reports of rainbow slugs showing up in rock pools
across Britain, little clumps of gummy confetti
bright against rock: audacious carnival of wild
color, though their presence means waters
are warming up even more from climate change.

Only Money

river in November light between bare woods and mountain
Explain to me how some people have old
money
— old meaning venerable and established,
and despite all known hindrances, multiplying
in the dark. Interest compounds thickly through
decades, not musty nor feeble or infirm.
When they call to it, it always comes
obediently, never protesting or throwing
them off when they ride it like a magnificent
stallion all over their green acreage.

Meanwhile, I walk through life rounding up
restless chickens, nervous that every rustle
in the hedge means a fox, snout twitching
at the thought of eggs heaped like zeroes
in the henhouse, ready to be carried away
and reduced to nothing and more nothing.
My kind have always been praised for our
industry. From sunup to sundown, bent over
in the fields— planting rice, gathering

strawberries and garlic, lettuce and
asparagus; pineapples, sugarcane. The kind of
bounty heaped on crystal platters and pristine
tablecloths in Rockwell's Freedom from Want.
When the overseer rang the bell, my people
lined up for paychecks made more meagre
by illegal deductions. And yet they passed
the hat to send a son to college, mail
uplift to families in their village.

How can I not respond when one of my children
calls to ask for help with rent, an insurance
payment, gas? Some friends say I'm an enabler,
by which they mean I'm feeding a crippling
dependency. Or they'll say, Do what you
want; it's only money— suggesting the more
important thing is to take care of what
needs taking care of. But for those who've
always had enough, it only means the loss

of any money should not cause undue
agony. My elders spoke of certain types
of debts written on water: a ledger
with lines and entries never legible,
except perhaps in the heart's memory.
Perhaps these calculate a different currency:
one that envisions how things might someday
return to hands resting in empty pockets,
that hopes for a different kind of saving.

Self Portrait, with Once-Lonely Sheep

river in November light between bare woods and mountain
Even now, in my sixties, I keep falling
in love with things. The crumpled
texture and weave of linen, the sharp
clean edge of a cotton collar, the soft
slouchy hems of bright socks. A lingering
lanolin smell in the folds of a wool
sweater makes me think of the sheep
that was in the news not too long ago.
There was ample grassland where she
was stranded at the foot of the Scottish
highlands. But with steep walls of rock
on one side and open water on the other,
she grew lonely for the company of others.
It took two long years until four farmers
used a winch to rappel down eight hundred
feet to rescue her. If Fiona— for that
was the name they gave her— could signal
her desire across the lonely shore
of Cromarty Firth, I too understand
the inner stirrings reminding me I'm
still here, inhabiting a body that quickens
to spring. Aren't you eager for the promise
of light the clean color of washed quartz,
for any small warm flame of delight you can
still cup in your hands? The humming
in the blood says yes, why not. Yes, yes.

Go On

river in November light between bare woods and mountain
I stock the freezer with food—
trays of chicken, a bag of peas
and one of corn. Blocks of butter.
Plastic boxes with meals I've made
ahead of teaching nights or trips
out of town. Adobo, picadillo,
afritada: dishes that freeze well.
I remember reading a poem in which
the speaker described opening the last
container of food her mother had made
before she died; then she and her father
sat down at the kitchen table and ate
through their tears until they couldn't
anymore. And so, while I can also see
that part of the reel, I know life will
continue wanting to be fed— wanting
the onions peeled, the fruit cored,
the kettle filled and put on the stove
to boil. Wanting even the small, ordinary
work of stirring sugar into coffee then
tapping the teaspoon on the rim of the cup.

Burdens

river in November light between bare woods and mountain
If they would rather slit 
their husband's throats in bed
than remain in forced, incestuous
marriages, I imagine the forty-
nine daughters of Danaus must not
have minded as much their punishment
in the afterlife: endlessly drawing
water from the river to fill a vessel
without a bottom. I'd prefer it
to running a race then getting
handed off as prize to a man
I've never seen before. What about
other characters cursed with impossible
tasks? The girl commanded to separate
and count each seed before sundown,
the child who must sweep up all
the sand in the desert. Then there's
Sisyphus, who gets to push a boulder
up a slope only for it to roll back down
again. How many times did he say You've got
to be kidding
or This is nuts? But he carried
on, didn't he? What started out as grief or
punishment must have become commitment,
patience. Maybe even pride. A way to shift
the burden of carrying from Impossible
to No matter what, I know what I can do.

Unknowns

river in November light between bare woods and mountain
I try deciphering the sky's patterns:
what blue means against grey, how much

white gathers over rust-colored hills
at which time of day, before night

plunges everything into uniform
darkness. Homebound during power

outages as storms lashed at windows,
to pass the hours sometimes we'd spin

cerveza bottles on the table when we
played cards, told fortunes, or asked

questions answerable by yes or no.
Who its amber neck pointed to

as it came to rest was the lucky or
unlucky one. But the future is never

a transparent sheet— more like a plain
brown manila envelope with a seal

that someone shoves under the door
with a warning not to open it until

it's time. But when is the right time,
and what will you find should you open

the flap and bring its contents nearer
the blue flame to read what it says?

The Windlass

river in November light between bare woods and mountain
Today it's Thursday. Wasn't it just 
Monday? Everything's moving too fast.

Every day seems to bring some new
betrayal of what we want to keep.

Buses and trains leave the station,
but at least they return. The neighbor's

dog barks when the postman brings the mail,
yet I haven't heard from you. It's been

nearly five years. Still, I collect
flickers of things— the shadow of leaves

on the trellis. Small, hard buds
emerging from nodes on the fig tree,

though the rest of it is still
shrouded in winter sleep. Evening

is a well into which the dark pours,
so we can pull it up just one small pail

at a time. But time, time is the windlass
to which all things— and we— are lashed.

Early Warning Systems

river in November light between bare woods and mountain
My ancestors knew how to listen
for sound before it even became
sound— for the tremor in the forest

canopy before seeds helicoptered
to the ground, for the rip in the air
through which a faraway storm first

tested its breath. It's a listening
that begins in the gut, that room
in the body where they knew

interrogations take place under
a naked light bulb swinging
from a scaffold of bone.

They learned to trust the call
of shrikes in the field, slugs
shriveling into themselves

at the first whiff of toxins in
the air. When I pause mid-breath
without even knowing why, it must be

their presence alerting me to the smell
of smoke, from having lived through past
fires. Obeying intuition, the body inks

a more visible map through minefields,
as if to signal that danger itself should
step aside from knowing we've seen it.

Impossible Dream

river in November light between bare woods and mountain
When they bought a record player console
with sliding cabinet doors, my parents
treated it like their most prized
possession— something to throw
a flannel cover on when not in use,
in case the chill mountain air might warp
its wooden panels. The Impossible Dream
from The Man of La Mancha was my father's
favorite recording. He had the Jack Jones
and Johnny Mathis, and later the Frank
Sinatra version from the album That's Life.
He liked to sit in an armchair after dinner,
eyes closed as he listened to the singer's
voice pull up and up toward the unreachable,
as the music swelled like a wave on a dark
night pinpricked with stars inside
his chest. He told me Cervantes' story
of a man who charged at windmills, believing
they were giants; of how he vowed to fight
for the helpless and infirm. This
was a noble quest, he stressed— to
bear the unbearable sorrow
and right
the unrightable wrong
. I couldn't fathom
then what sorrows he could have been carrying,
what wrongs he might have needed to address.
He's been gone more than thirty years,
yet when the world feels tilted, I remember
how sure his voice sounded, as if
the dream— any dream— was within reach.