Portrait of the Body After Having Given Birth

river in November light between bare woods and mountain
All of us travel here 
in the same way, in our
own time.

The body, breaking
through the surface,
learns that such entry
is never clean.

What opens may not ever
return to its former shape.
At the moment it happens,
it's aided by gravity.

And the mind, too, moves
downward toward what
palpably hurts.

After, there is
the loneliness of having
been the doorway. You are
the portal through which more
than language has passed.

You can't take anything
back. You can call it
devotion or you can
call it regret.

But it isn't by accident
that the areola's soft
bluish flesh connects
magnetically

to that ocean in whose depths
one could drown, cresting
the waves of pleasure.

On Not Repeating

river in November light between bare woods and mountain
Counting, like in the tales
where girls are given impossible
tasks to numb their fingers and hearts—
Separate grain from pebbles by nightfall,
sew seven shirts without speaking a word
for seven years. Silence itself, part
of the spell: a clause in a contract
you don't even remember having signed
in blood or ink. Only in those stories
are there helpers: talking mice,
birds, ants, meaning belief
in the kindness of nature which
somehow bends toward you because
it intuits an injustice. But I want
to know how the curse can be broken,
how the loop of bad luck can be severed
once and for all, not just reversed.
I want to drop this needle and
burn this loom, see my loves
emerge out of the forest or
soften from stone back into flesh.
Let whatever I may have mislaid
be suddenly found in the corner
of a coat pocket, the toe of a shoe.

I Did Not Buy Flowers Today

river in November light between bare woods and mountain
Feeling slightly out of alignment with
the world, I stop at the grocery store
looking for something to nudge me back
onto the road of purpose I drive each
day— home to work, work to home. I think
of getting flowers, but would that be
admitting something I can't say aloud?
In there, the sunflowers are smaller
than I remember: heads disheveled
under LED lights, faces turned nowhere
in particular. Have they, too, forgotten
how to follow the sun? There's not one
particular cause for blame— not the hike
in oil prices nor the increasingly infertile
soil from climate change, not the store
and the unpredictability of supply and demand.
Once, the hills of my childhood were dotted
with the same yellow blooms. Their brightness
reflected a light I never questioned, as if
it would always be there, forgiving me
everything before I even thought to say
what for. I try to think of that light again
here, and in the end I leave the flowers
with their price tags exactly where they are.
I walk back into my day, hands empty
of everything but this honesty.

Lonely God Potato Twists

river in November light between bare woods and mountain
I would too, if I were lonely
and if I were a god. I'd invent

a snack like this: Lonely God
Potato Twists
, red and yellow

and foil-wrapped among the shrimp
chips and Boy Bawang in the Asian

grocery. Also, what's not to love
about a plot twist after years of yawn

and meh? Remember Chubby
Checker in the '60s, who hit

number one on the Billboard Hot
100 not once but twice? Suddenly

everyone was dancing in place,
swiveling their hips, having

a good time: Come on baby... and go
like this. But in 1962, in Buffalo,

New York, a bishop saw only lewdness
in these gyrations and banned them—

which only made the Twist more popular.
Joy doesn't need permission. It catches on

like contagion. Any lonely god would want
to feel loosed from the world's grip

sometimes. As for the chips, of course
I buy them. I tear the packet open with

my hands— each salty crunch loud as
the sound of a rule breaking somewhere.

Plans and conditions,

river in November light between bare woods and mountain
wills and directives— if this,  

then that. If we're lucky, or
not. Who benefits from certain

actions? Who gains from my love
of bathing in sunlight, loses

from my habit of pulling up weeds
with bare hands? I know the cost

of not putting things in order.
I also know also how impossible

it is to itemize assets vs. debts,
time spent vs. time held against

future use. Finally, I'm learning
to sort the mail as soon as it

comes, to believe in dreams
as dreams instead of prophecy—

one springs from the mind
of what can be, and the other

from the mind of what seems
to know what can't be known.

Still

river in November light between bare woods and mountain
We go back to the doctor whose name
means either target or stain. Back to
the room with crinkly paper on the exam
table, posters on the walls illustrating
roads connecting the nose to the throat
and the ear. We are here for results,
which means consequence or outcome,
or the score after a test. The doctor
says a few new spots, as if he might
be talking about cafés in town
or tickets to a sold-out concert.
Small, he says like an afterthought;
just something to watch. But already
the muscle that anticipates grief
has awakened again in me. We walk
to the parking garage. Magnolias
are pinking their branches. Cars honk.
A guy walks across the street, eyes glued
to a phone in his hands, oblivious. Almost
evening but the light is still impossibly
bright, so we decide to stop for ice
cream. When we lie down at night, I listen
to your breathing, tell myself the future
isn't arriving yet, or all at once.

I am an immigrant like you

river in November light between bare woods and mountain
except in all the ways my being
an immigrant are different
from all the ways you experience
your being an immigrant
differently from me.

And yet we are capable
of the same joy, the same
grieving, the same terrible
capacity to break and be
broken open, to choose rice
over bread, both salt and sugar,
soft instead of hard.

Notes on Translation

river in November light between bare woods and mountain
Language isn't 
the only gate you think
leads to the garden.

Try to enter the mind
of the one whose work
you're translating.

It might be easier to bribe
the watchman, but where
is the charm in that?

Before it existed as riddle,
the poem beat against stones
at the foot of the cliff.

Or it hung among particles
caught in the lighthouse beams
sweeping across the channel.

The sound of air passing
through the mouth is a variant
of a form that can't be seen.

The chest rises and falls. The water
recedes. Sometimes you can walk so far
without encountering a ripple.

Feet

river in November light between bare woods and mountain
How strange they look, the toes 
like little knobs of ginger snapped

from the root, or like pulled out
taffy, cooled mid-stretch. Heels,

meanwhile, thicken with calluses from
walking or running, standing in line.

From wearing shoes made by those who don't
seem to have any idea beyond the novel

design. Surrender your feet to the woman
at the pedicure place. She'll cluck

as she lowers them into a water bath, then
pat each one dry before sanding down things

with a power tool— like furniture. Furnish,
from the mid-15th century: to fit out,

equip, provision (as in a castle, a ship,
a person). Which is to say, what's used daily,

over time needs some polish. From another angle,
they resemble two narrow isthmuses side by side,

anchoring the mainland of the body to wood floor,
bathroom tile, sandy beach or garden plot. They turn

into maps at the accupressurist's, who traces
and kneads, leans hard into a spot, saying

Liver, lung, right here! the little intestine,
blocked.
Suddenly the key fits into the lock.

A marvel, as if all this time, what you've
always wanted to know was just under your heel.

Romance, with Golden Record

river in November light between bare woods and mountain
We write messages, put them in bottles,
cast them into space. We curate what we think
is the best of us, or the most representative
of us. Music played by symphonies, the one-
note hum of a sitar, a shimmering copper
chorus of gongs, the mellow voices of poets.
Laughter, rain and foghorns; animal calls,
greetings in 55 languages. Who even knows
when or whether or not future beings
will examine our artifacts? By then,
the oceans will long have forgotten
our names and continents crumbled
in the depths like soggy croutons. Still,
we are in love with the idea that beauty
will somehow outlast the void,
that a billion light years from now,
something of us might survive, even
if only as a chord in the dust of space.