My friend shows me his arthritic
fingers, and I try to click my trigger
thumb. But he can't hear the noise
it makes because of the vacuum cleaner
sounds made by the tinnitus in his ear.
I suppose we're getting to the age
when we can start to tell the difference
between a dull hurt and a door that's
permanently closed, between the new-new
shine of chrome encasing a cheap plastic
interior and the unpolished gleam of a body
whose limp is louder than its mind. The world
loves words like résumé, strategic, and
effective positioning. It rewards the one
who hasn't even earned their name,
the one who hasn't stood at the edge of
an ultimatum or answered a call at midnight
which rearranged the entire plot of a life.
I sometimes take my graduation ring
out of its box and wear it, just to remind
myself I know some shit. I've learned
that forgive doesn't mean forget, but also
how shame burns hot at first but you can
learn to outlast it. Becoming is long, hard
work, and I know I only have these ordinary
days to build from, to cobble some light
even from failure for the rest of the path.
The History of Weekends
My husband, who cooks on weekends,
goes on the internet to find out when
weekends became a thing. In ancient Rome,
every eighth day was market day. During
the Han dynasty, officials took every fifth
day off to rest and wash their hair.
In the early nineteenth century, factory
owners and laborers came to an agreement
that work could stop at two on Saturday
afternoon, as long as people would come
to work sober on Monday. It wasn't until
1940 that the Fair Labor Standards Act
formalized the forty-hour workweek
and the two-day weekend. Some people
wanted more time for beer, others
for prayers. Some people sit idling
at their desks, then promptly shut down
their computers at 5:01. It's as if
the ceiling had changed to a different
color. Some colleagues advise me to ignore
work email on weekends, even when my Inbox
column glows with insistent green dots
at 10 PM. My youngest daughter says,
productivity and optimalization are concepts
of the capitalist machine. Why shouldn't rest
also be legislated? Heat up leftovers, or make
a small meal from scratch. Make tea, write
in your notebook, make valentines with your
second-grader. Think of a nap as an achievement,
as well as the whole history behind your being where
you are: here, when it could have been otherwise.
Everyday Ciphers
There are rooms from which I know I departed
too quickly.
Displacement is its own unstable architecture.
I can never completely erase what was faint
if it was persistent to begin with.
When I take my first clear breath after illness,
the world smells both sharp and tender.
I remember echoes in stairwells, and streetcorners where
small flames were tended in the service of our hungers.
There are flowers that don't recognize boundaries.
We should learn from them that nothing wild is
ever made to be captive.
Breath can rise even from the cracked earth.
Push
There are days when you get
some good traction and the load
you push, though it hasn't gotten
lighter, slides forward. But
there are other days when
the stone doesn't budge.
You make a notch in the earth
with your shoe or find some other
way to prop it up for a while,
so you can nap or go eat
chocolate-covered popcorn
and get your fingers sticky,
which means you'll have to wash up
at the sink, by which time you realize
what you actually want to do is take
a long, hot shower, use the bar of
jasmine soap you were saving for some
forgotten reason. Just a little
time to breathe without bracing
for the next thing to drop,
for the next addition to the weight
you never saw coming. You know
relief can come in the in-between,
uneven spaces, some mercy small
as a smile or a touch of a hand.
Though the weight hasn't grown lighter
you are trying to understand how it
doesn't necessarily mean you have failed
at the carrying, that your life isn't
just the color and shape of this stone.
Wishes
I've been told to stop apologizing
for things over which no one has
any control. And yet, all these years,
I still can't stop saying I'm sorry
for the circumstances that made
the distances I thought we were
trying in our own way to bridge
now seem insurmountable. To say
I no longer want to have anything
to do with you is a choice, just as
it is to say I would not close that
door completely. Every day, I fan
my wishes out like cards on the table.
That wherever you are, mornings
are gentle and the winds warm; that you
understand your name could never be
spoken in anger. That remembrance
walks behind us quietly, but following.
Expiration Date
The main character in a Dutch
movie announces to everyone:
this is the day she is going
to die. She lies down in her own
bed without a fuss, untroubled,
certain of what will happen.
Perhaps she is done with all
the negotiations, all the upkeep
that life requires of her— done
with farming and raising children,
done with chasing and refusing
sex, patching up quarrels, standing
up to injustice, stretching a pay-
check, bulking up a meal. Done
too with the Sunday suppers in
the garden, the long, earnest
conversations with friends deep
into the night. But how did she know,
how does anyone know? It's not like you're
given a ticket or schedule, a station or
terminal. It's not like a clock on the mantel
that you can hear winding down. But some insist
you will know when it's time— perhaps
when the floating world grows even more
transparent, every bubble brightening
imperceptibly just as it starts to dissolve.
The Body as Source of Light
A thousand meters deep
in the zone called mesopelagic,
a lanternfish lifts its tiny row
of photophores, offering to slip it
into the ocean's voluminous sleeves.
Nightly it rises toward the surface
to feed on plankton. By itself,
its gleam is a sliver. But millions
of them shimmer the water with
tinfoil. Their light is endogenous—
meaning they produce it with their own
bodies. What an astonishment: to find
inside of us two sticks or flint and steel,
what it might take to start a flame.
Questions, with Animal Footprint and Stingless Bee
Not yet erased from a stone
slab in the yard: a single
footprint of an animal, visible
in the almost dark just as snow
has started to fall. Was it lame
or hurt, or bounding away from
some pursuer? We too move through
this uncertain space that every
day feels more abandoned by light.
But somehow our bodies carry us in
the dark, and we stretch our arms
forward, feeling for the shape
of something solid or a hand to pull
us in the right direction toward
home. Isn't that what we all want?
If stingless honeybees in the rain-
forests of the Amazon have been granted
the legal right to exist and thrive
and be legally represented when harmed
or threatened, why should our breaths
and voices not rise above a hum or leap
toward sounds that call to us in welcome?
Introduction to Literature
Nineteen pairs of eyes train
themselves on the front of the room,
perhaps on me, perhaps on an interesting
spot on the whiteboard. We are doing
close reading, and already I see some
slumped slightly in their chairs or leaning
toward the end of the hour. They want to know
what it is exactly they should know to pass
this course, what it is exactly I am
supposed to want from them. These days
the world is always using words like
faster, more efficient, and optimize—
as if the mind were a flat rate box
stuffed with content on an assembly
line, then taped and pushed down
a chute. I long for those times we
lingered over the pages of a favorite
book read more than once, for mornings
unspooling toward afternoon and evening
along with sentences so brilliant, I
couldn't get them out of my head.
Microchimeric
In the tissue-lined channels of my body,
the cells of my children drift like lanterns.
They flicker with messages encoded long ago,
carrying bits of story that remain on this
side of the water. Outside, they row
in the wind through their own cartography,
sometimes returing to the port of their first
origins. Sometimes I am the lighthouse keeper,
and sometimes I am my own vessel, trying
like them to breach treacherous depths
to reach a calmer sea. Across the years
and all this distance, I want to believe
there is still a quiet hum of signals at
cellular level, and that as long as they
are there, none of us could ever be lost.

