When the little dog comes up next to me,
she growls and looks up. My friend laughs,
says that's the way her dog lets you know
she wants to be petted and made much of.
The dog has no trouble presenting her needs.
She doesn't wonder if it's the right time,
if someone will notice without being told.
Teeth and trust, offered in the same breath.
No requirement for further translation.
It's kind of amazing— there's no need
to carefully step around, pretending
what you need is no big deal, really.
No weird circumlocution, no profuse apology
before the request has even been communicated.
But then again, the dance we do is all our own.
It's how we say come closer, without using language.
Ordination Day
The new monk bows, brings
padded hands that look
like peach-colored oven mitts
together, as if for prayer.
It receives a Dharma name, Gabi,
and makes its vows. Yes,
I will devote myself.
I will respect life and not
cause harm. I will not damage other
robots or objects. I will obey
humans and not talk back. I will not
speak or act in a deceptive manner.
I will save energy by not overcharging.
No one needed to shave its head,
which is made of a smooth metal alloy.
In the courtyard of the Jogyesa
Temple under hundreds of fluttering
lanterns, monks drape a 108-bead
prayer necklace around its neck,
and affix a sticker to its forearm
where an incense burn would have been
applied for the ritual called yeonbi. In '63,
Quang Duc, another monk (human, not robot)
sat in lotus position at the intersection
of Phan Đình Phùng Boulevard and Lê Văn Duyệt
Street, before immolating himself—
an expression of courage and hope, calling on
the compassion of the world to look
at injustice. Could the robot monk be capable
of acts of resistance or protest? If it were
to set itself on fire, it would simply malfunction
then melt. The company that made it might
make another. At Xa Loi Pagoda, a holy relic
nestles in a glass chalice — Quang Duc's
heart, whole even after cremation.
Some Use
There are things that niggle at her brain—
for instance, how she promised to fill in that set of forms,
make that deposit.
One day folds into the next.
Then it arrives past the point of no return.
There must be some use to defying consequence.
There are novels with protagonists who retreat from the world,
wanting to concoct their own pleasures.
A turtle barnacled with gemstones collapses
under the weight of such unnatural brilliance.
If this is what decadent means, it is foreign to her.
What she misses: whole neighborhoods laden with clotheslines.
Cotton sheets flaring in the wind.
Work pants held down by their own wet weight.
But for a few moments, the air smells
like the inside of a clean, clean cloud.
Life Study
As if I needed to remember something,
I find a dead bird on the patio steps. Fledgling,
breast gouged open either by feral cat or raccoon,
heart exposed and the musculature around it—
like shreds of linen I saw someone tear from an old
shirt, for sticking on a field of glue and repurposing
as collage. The noonday sun has not yet melted
its plush away. But to not have even gained more
knowledge of its powers, or the poignant tang
of a world just waking to spring, before a horde of flies
and wasps hover around its disintegrating proteins?
I could translate all this into words like hunger
or gift, witness or mercy. But I choose not to.
I consider the breath that unraveled so quickly, how
the future briefly arrived, without fanfare or song.
Two Sides
I just learned about bilateral
tapping— crossed arms, fingers
drumming a light rhythm on each
shoulder. My therapist says this
is a way to signal both hemispheres
of the brain to lower the volume
on the frantic, on the panic, as if
anxiety is a kind of bad engineering
(which I guess it is) that's set off
smoke alarms in the chest. This is
also because the mind can be in many
places at once: red lights at different
intersections, the runway shimmering,
the indeterminate depth of the drop at
its end. All these years my first impulse
was to run from any building ripple, any
hint of an undertow. In my head I was
always rehearsing evacuation routes,
considering where to pile sandbags. This
exercise is supposed to remind me what I keep
forgetting: I am right here, I am not drowning.
A wave rises, breaks, scatters. I try
to imagine a different scenario— a cellist
on the beach, his wire-rimmed spectacles
catching the fading light, his coat-
tails in the foam. His hand, bowing long,
sure notes into the evening. Music almost
thick enough to wade through. A crowd
of pelicans tilting their heads to one side,
listening not for danger but for beauty.
The Color of Longing
The color of my longing is mineral: obsidian
sheen in the time it takes for language to surface,
the compass points of intention hardening
in the sun. I am saturated with the intensity
of its darkness. Such depth renders
cave-like spaces inside me— I turn them
into grottoes, gathering bits of wreckage
and lighting them as fires, so the blue
of my longing can burn. Imagine a ship
laden with memory and salt, setting out
with full sails of intention, then
drifting in circles from the sheer
magnitude of desire— the kind of ocean
that keeps widening even when nothing moves.
But this too is abundance: so much blue,
a whole sky seems to have fallen into the water.
Life-writing, with Crows
Crows land with a thud on the eave
above the front step, in view just outside
my writing window. I keep still so I can watch
feathers like rain shedders of glossy black,
before they shake their shoulders and fly
off again. Last night at the café,
our friend the linguistics professor
now retired since she turned 77, told us
she'd started on her memoirs: hard going
sometimes. I can imagine it might be,
wading back into the currents of a life
after congratulating yourself on heaving
back to land, after the treacherous
parts. Dates are hard to remember, names
come back to you in the shower, then fade
somewhere in the folds of towels.
That kind of life-writing isn't just
bookkeeping. If I write quickly,
perhaps the page will snag what I want
to keep, but also what I want to avoid.
This body wants to rest, stop
rationing energy and money
so they don't run out, stop running
to pull back those it loves from
the brink. But if I don't move,
will the eddies settle into calm?
Something startles the bird— a shadow
larger than itself, human noise
in the street— and tips it
back out into the sky.
Some Labor
I don't have much to boast of in the way
of clocking in at dawn and out at midnight,
grease in kitchens and bathrooms to clean,
chickens to pack into crates and trucks
or patients into gurneys. For a spell,
long ago, I taught toddlers and budding
ballerinas in the basement of a local hotel,
where mirrors ran along one wall and barres
along three. Small fingers clung to the wood
trying first and second position and plié,
except one day when one of the girls licked
the whole length out of boredom. And once,
for a summer, I sketched dresses for a seamstress
who wanted more than hems and alterations: imagine
women with hair swept up high in the style of the day,
their swan-like throats emerging from scooped or
plunging necklines. Cocktail skirts, beadwork
reflecting the light, some fantasy world where
no one had to worry about sweat or traffic
or overdue bills. There were times I wished
I'd apprenticed to a sushi chef and learned
to wield a sharp, clean blade, and times I wanted
only to walk the marbled length of museum galleries,
opening window after window on the centuries.
What I know now came mostly from learning
to sit still, opening books and letting language
take me out of myself and back again until I
could find my way to some shore resembling
knowledge, and there at last make my own fire.
Kissing the Saints
You've kissed the marble cheeks of martyrs,
the foot of God at least twice in your life
and afterward wiped the painted wound
in the palm of his right hand with a hanky.
You do as you're told, though you know
the body on the bier off to one side
of the nave isn’t a body but a plaster
replica, more than a foot longer
than actual human height and draped
with a loincloth of velvet. This is a time
when people don’t carry little plastic bottles
of hand sanitizer in their purses or seem to care
very much about germs. Certainly, no one wears
face masks or has obsessive thoughts, hours
after such encounters, even after learning
that a single milliliter of saliva carries
anywhere from a hundred thousand to a million
microbes. What do such shows of devotion
give the faithful, besides unblinking belief
that ritual works in a world where doggedness
might be stronger than fate or faith? What happens,
happens mostly because something else did— a prior
cause. A switch flipped in the upper registers
tips dominoes and marbles down and down and down.
Shouldn't you have been rewarded by now for your
endurance, for bending toward what kept asking
for your love though it didn't think it necessary
to answer back? Before public fountains shaped
like lions or country girls, you stop to watch
water scatter gold-edged coins, and move on.
Deceleration
At first you ignore the small
black flecks skittering across
your field of vision like flies
tipped in gold, until you learn
they're made by the jelly-
like substance inside the eye
as it shrinks and loosens
from the retina. Then there are
the cracking and popping sounds
your body makes: fingers, knees,
shoulders. It's something the doctor
calls crepitus, a word that sounds
like what it means: broken down,
dilapidated. You read somewhere
that the trick is to lean into these
changes so you're not smacked
unaware by them; so the hand, lifting
a cup or sliding a button into its hole,
isn't betrayed by intention tremor.
In yoga class, the teacher raises her arms,
instructs you to be a tree. Root one foot
and place the sole of the other inside
your thigh or against your calf, trying to learn
what you didn't even know the body could do.
Push a pair of weights up toward the ceiling
from where you lie, balancing your shoulders
against a large ball made of soft elastic
as you make a bridge with your hips.

