Two Sides

river in November light between bare woods and mountain
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

river in November light between bare woods and mountain
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

river in November light between bare woods and mountain
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

river in November light between bare woods and mountain
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

river in November light between bare woods and mountain
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

river in November light between bare woods and mountain
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.

Partial Compendium of this Unfinished World

river in November light between bare woods and mountain
We learned about the world
through stories— how a jealous
sky swallowed a woman’s ornaments
and a beast rose from the waters
to steal the lustre of the moon.

We threw ourselves
into the only weapons we knew—
Our bodies, dancing old rituals,
clanging the music we fashioned
from metal and fire.

Astrologers point out planets
aligning. Stars die and give birth
to new ones. Craning our necks to see,
do we wonder if they ever want to see us?
When it rains, we put pails underneath

leaks in the ceiling. We open the lids
of metal drums, so they can store water
for the dry seasons. Birds rise in droves,
their dark bodies practicing their own
cursives on a slate.

When a shingle in the roof
of heaven comes undone, we know
we'll hear the echo of thunder,
that voice saying the world and all
in it remains unfinished.

Second Wind

river in November light between bare woods and mountain
Each time any of us comes back
from the brink, what kind of triumph
is it? Is it the soul or the muscles
trained a lifetime to hold things in,
to burble and breathe under water?
And those of us who have pulled
someone back, or stood in a hallway
after the chaos has settled, how
did we find the strength to return
again and again to this work?
What made it possible to steady
our voices, our hands, to open
the purse-strings a little wider,
a little closer to the bottom?
We're taught love is generous.
Or it gives without making a tally,
doing up sums. But love is also
the crumpled bag under the sink,
every shred of Kleenex in the bin,
bottles of Acetaminophen+
Caffeine, endless hours before dawn
wondering what helped and what didn't.
Sometimes this is called patience.
Other times, watchfulness and waiting.
Maybe it's the soul, unfurling damp
wings over everything it can reach,
or the body stretching before what
it believes could be the last long
stretch it can run without stopping.

Love: 10 Digressions

river in November light between bare woods and mountain
In the spice drawer, cloves look like nails. They stay 
quiet in their jar but exhale a warm breath, even when
unbroken.

I have been lovestruck, which is a kind of standing still.

A plover runs haltingly across mudflats, as if unsure
whether to dwell on land or water.

It's almost May, but overnight the cold returns. Vacation
houses are still shuttered. Somewhere, a louvre opens
its ribs to let light in, by which you know no shell
is completely empty.

What you think is lovely is not always loyal, not always
gentle. For every lovey-dovey thing, there's a mouth pressed
to a phone, cursing.

There's a girl in a slip and a straw hat, leaning over a ship
railing, knowing she will wreck a lover's heart.

I have clung to things before—to folded letters, residue
of scent in the linens, the last, gold-dusted sweet
tucked in an ancient ribboned box.

Even worn to thinness, gloves bear the shape of the hands
that slipped them on.

This is how love hides: inside skins, inside other words, inside
hours we lose track of when we're not watching.

Beloved, I say. Which carries a little ache, a longing, and then
I am apalled by the slovenlinesss of my avowed devotion—
clothes in a heap, messy notebooks, wine that's turned
to vinegar in the dark.

Weariness

river in November light between bare woods and mountain
It settles behind your eyes

It rests its forehead against the door jamb
and listens to the hum of laundry machines

It's the sound of a spoon
absently circling the rim of a cup

The residue under fingernails that speaks of trying

The way branches droop even after they
have given up their fruit

The inside of a coat pocket
where receipts have been stuffed

The pot of mint on the sill cranes toward light
that only partially filters through blinds

Still, you want to praise it for bringing you
back into the smallness of a moment

Not asking to witness, not speaking in tongues

Proof of how you train your body toward something
so real it leaves an undeniable mark