A friend said being married
isn't hard— it's maintaining eros
that's challenging. I try to remember
if eros ever held a glitter gun in one
hand and a champagne flute in the other.
Back then, eros seemed to think love
always needed to be boldly announced,
leave a hot imprint in hotel sheets
in the middle of a weekday, pass
a sweet from its mouth to another's.
Now, after kids and a mortgage,
we've swapped flaming saganakis
for cheese sandwiches at work,
survive with coffee and Power-
Points. We've learned it takes
work for anything, including
desire. It takes work to keep
a surface fabulous, a system
running at peak efficiency.
Down in the murky depths
where lanternfish live, sparkle
and glow aren't just embellishment
or distraction: their bioluminescence
helps them blend in with the shimmer
of water hit by sunlight. But yes,
the extra rows of photophores
embedded in their bellies are also
for romance, for signaling to
potential mates in the dark—
eros saying Hey, I'm stll
here, it's still me.
Between the Fantail Shrimp and Sea Cucumber
At the table next to us in the dim
sum restaurant, there's a young couple
out on a date. They lean over the menus
and toward each other, as if bringing
their heads closer will help toward
consensus. She's cute and dimpled:
hoop earrings, high ponytail bobbing
like a friendly otter. Aura confident
as the lilt in her voice. Two smiling,
long-haired waiters circle the table: they
went to school with the girl. She claps
her hands at their excellent suggestions—
fantail shrimp, black mushrooms with sea
cucumber; pan-fried noodles, turnip cake.
They flirt, knowing exactly what they're
doing, while the boyfriend laughs politely
and nods his head. Carts rattle past
like vessels bearing miracles from other
worlds. We dip dumplings into pools of chili
oil, ears bent to banter and conversation,
knowing full well the performance of desire
loves an audience. Some of us are struck
with recognition, some pretend this
has nothing to do with us at all.
On Nosebleeds
Even if under the surface there's always
a lot going on, my friends insist I look
so zen— like a buddha who's trascended
this vale of suffering, another quips.
Which I reject, because even if the buddha
may have reincarnated into this form— my form—
the fact that I'm still here means that I'm
nowhere near nirvana. If I've managed to exude
a semblance of calm, perhaps it's because
I had a little bit of early training. For instance,
I got nosebleeds every day until I reached third
grade: the sudden jets of blood, the bright taste
of copper in my throat in the middle of reading,
adding, or listening. Someone would pinch
the bridge of my nose with a wad of paper towel,
and take me to the principal's office so I wouldn't
disturb the classroom lesson. The surprise
of the first time lapses a little more into
the ordinary after each repetition. One day
something spills down the front of your white
blouse, and each day after you learn how
to manage. Adulthood is pretty much a long
practice in composure— learning to lean
forward a little bit without panicking,
until something in the body rights itself
and the frightening gush peters out,
after which you clean up the mess.
Collective
A smack of jellyfish drifts in
on the tide, translucent and pulsing
but never second-guessing what they are
or what they can do. A crash of rhinos
doesn't tiptoe through life. A murmuration
of starlings is hundreds of bodies swerving
and dispersing at the same time with no
script. Can we be as a flock, move
seamlessly both alone and when we gather?
A murder of crows rises above the trash
bins in the parking lot. We blunder and
snipe, hide our thoughts from ourselves
and each other. And at night, a parliament
of owls passes judgment from on high.
Old World, New World
Old World, New World, metaphors we made
for the colonies we outgrew and the colonies
we set sail for. People say we are at that
kind of transition again— feeling the world
we thought we knew splitting open like a seed
pod under pressure. So much failure, exhaustion,
uncertainty, and war. Drones fly over gardens,
tankers barrel through straits on fire. So much
has changed. Or so much has merely changed
hands. Yet power stays put. Spoils of many
conquests, we've been trying to survive in
the margins, in the aftermath of the last
aftermath and the last. Imagine freeing river and
forest and plain from maps into their old names.
Delivery
Coming back from the dentist, half my face
still numb from the lidocaine and epinephrine
injected in my gums, I listen to a woman
on the radio who's telling the story of
giving birth to her baby at home. What's
remarkable is that she was around three
weeks over her due date. Her midwife
tells her to believe her body knows
what it is supposed to do, and her un-
born child too. All turns out well
in that story: a child weighing over
ten pounds, with ten fingers and toes.
Would I have been as brave, as trusting?
There was a time in the annals of medical
science when it was believed babies knew
no pain. I cringe, imagining the trauma
and shock when they might have needed
surgery. The woman on the radio repeats,
the body is wise and knows what to do.
There is instinct, and there is also pain.
I know from experience the numbness
in my mouth will wear off in a few
hours, after which I can eat and drink
but carefully, since I only have
temporaries over my back molars.
The body is wise in many ways. But
the body breaks, can be broken.
The body also needs so much support.
The dental assistants talk about making
a mold for constructing the bridge
I need. They've modeled it after
the shape of that part of the interior
of my mouth, a wet cave they flush dry
with air every few minutes. One shines
her headlight over a spot that needs
more buildup, and suctions up any
loose material. I am told to return
in two weeks for the delivery
of the final product.
Poem For When I Can’t Sleep at Night
After decades of bragging I do my best
work late at night since I'm a night owl,
how is it that I'm practically nodding
into my plate by the end of dinner,
wanting to straightaway brush my teeth,
wash my face, and climb under the covers?
But once I'm there and close my eyes, how
is it that something clicks the lights on
again in my brain and it's anything but
calmante? A friend suggested a visualization
exercise: think of a softly lit orb just above
my head descending as it slowly inflates,
humming over each part of my body until
it reaches my feet. By that time, she said,
you'll be sound asleep. Except before
it can glide over my chest, I'm lost
and awake in a chain of memory-associations.
The light becomes the crackly flash cube
on those old cameras. My mother's ordering
everyone back on the sofa for another picture
because she's sure her eyes were half-closed.
The collar of my mohair sweater is itchy.
All I want to do is drink a cold Mirinda
Orange soda and kick off my shoes. At Gregg's,
she chose them because they were shiny patent
leather; maybe she felt she needed to get me
something, just because she bought two pairs
of pumps for herself. My mother knew she wasn't
born with any kind of spoon in her mouth—
she had to figure out how to get to everything
she wanted, even if it meant staying up late
to sew frothy dresses for wealthy matrons
and their homely daughters, and praising
how they looked when they came for fittings.
She had natural style, though, and could pull
off any outfit. She knew what top to match
with what pencil skirt without looking exactly
like the secretaries in my father's office. Now
I'm lying in my darkened bedroom, in my head
trying to compose tomorrow's outfit. She never
let me wear jeans until I got to college, but now
I wear them even when I teach: dark wash, cuffed
at the hem, or sporting visible mending stitches
I made with bright embroidery thread. I like to wear
low boots and throw on my most unstuffy blazer, aim
for a look that says confident and put together,
but not trying too hard. I've also become
a woman who has to work hard for what she
wants, including the sleep I crave so much.
Quantum Entanglement
Who was it that said rub
the sticks of your bad luck together
and make a little fire out of them?
Well then, why not an all-out conflagration,
a let's-burn-you-down-to-the-cinders so there's
no hope of it coming back (the bad luck, I mean)?
People are always starting memes or conversations
with questions like What should your future
self have said to your past self at a time
when you might have most needed it? I can think
of more than one of those times when I was young
and timid, easily intimidated but scrambling
to quickly put on some costume of bravado.
My future self should have told that past self
Look, kid, it gets better or You don't have
to get hitched to make a life you can call
your own. And when the girl that was me was told
by a man Don't pretend you don't know what I want,
my future self should have said through her mouth
Why don't you fuck all the way off? In this life,
we're lucky to get a glimpse of something trifling
in the moment that later turns out to be (in hindsight)
important. Like the time this girl in a sci-fi series
we were watching says if she'd stayed home instead
of taken the trash to the end of the road, her house,
and her mother inside that house, might still be
around instead of being disappeared into some kind of
wormhole. It turns out the mother didn't really want
to be a mother. And children always think it must be
their fault. Perhaps the girl lingered too long after
school, mouth open and entranced by trees along the way
spangled with icicles, determined to see if each drop
tasted different. Perhaps the mother wanted to go
to conservatory, train her voice into a sweet soprano.
Or she wanted to master theoretical physics and quantum
entanglement, calculating correlations that persist
across light years and distances. In theory,
manipulating entangled particles can help alter
a particle's past state. Think of your future
self taking your child self's hand in your own,
both of you walking into a winter night, little
dendrite flakes suspended for a moment, looking
as though they could be falling either down or up.
Not to be the Sun
Some say I am light-
ning when I write, sure
of the strike and the burn.
Brilliance seen for miles
around, but is it only for
the space of a few seconds?
The accretions of language
through the years, flint
cobbled from the silt and
mud of this life. Sentences
honed through practice—
this requires patience.
This is not an ode
to the ways in which
certain hothouse plants
bloom only one night each
year— a grand display,
followed by sad withering.
Neither is this praise
for steadfastness or obscurity,
for holding still against
a background, like the velvet
of moth wings melting against
warm screens of bark.
And this isn't mere
argument for importance and
various other bold announcements
of self— not to be the sun, but
to have proof my small heat matters
and emits a real radiance of its own.
Poem with a line from Linda Gregg
Fragile and momentary, we continue,
waking to the pull of breath at dawn.
Outside, the world begins to dress in light.
So many small forms of hesitation: the way
the kettle on the stove somehow doesn't sit
completely within the burner's circle,
and so the water takes longer to shrill.
Last night's rain still lines the undersides
of leaves, and the lamps on the street have not
yet gone out. I am always standing in the in-
between, one hand folded around a dream, the other
raised toward the shape of a decision. My ear
turning toward the last place it remembers
an animal once stopped for water.

