Poetry

The First Day at School with an Empty Seat

When you’re gone we just don’t
talk about you anymore,
don’t mention your existence
or the sudden absence of it,

much less still our lips for a minute
of silence sacrificed in your name.
The quiet we cover you up with
is colder than that,
less like a burial with its awful, haunted wailing
and more like a neat, clean, pink eraser
in the hands of a businessman
who assures you it isn’t personal.

Not personal:
therein lies the poison.

The system, we are assured,
can chug along without you—
you, a replaceable cog or piston—
so don’t worry about the collateral damage
if you ever find yourself suddenly missing,
because instead of dropping to our knees in the snow,
scratching and ripping
at the dead grass and dirt
till we unearth a deeper pain
and clearer purpose for living,
we’ll be so fine it will make you
uncomfortable.

We pretend that the pond
has no ripples post-stone,
and what scares me most
is if we spend enough days
running out far away from the
center of the center of our
soul-centered self like this,

eventually
it won’t.

Poetry

Release

A migrant fox found me
sitting cross-legged and composed
in the clipped little system
of my front yard.
He was kingly and distant,
a perfect picture,
and I didn’t want to ask,
didn’t mean to make it awkward,

but he was the one who came to me:
free-willed, flame-backed,
he stood firm on his feet
beside my lap
and let me slip my hand
down the silk of his skin,
then test the gold waters
of eye contact.

And I longed for him then,
as he must have expected,
as all nomads and rebels
must keep their space
from this world of cages
and schedules and claims.

He felt the tightening
in my hands in advance,
before it ever came,
and so he looked at me long
and he vanished away.

But all this did not break the leash—
for once you love a wild thing,

you yourself are no longer free.

Poetry

Ten Weeks

My baby is the size of a haiku.

Baby Offstage

Eyelids squint, knees bend,
hands clench. You're learning your lines,
memorizing life.

Poetry

Seven Weeks

My baby is the size of a word.

wonder
Poetry

Five Weeks

My baby is the size of a question mark.

?
Poetry

Mistaken Identity

Poetry

Almost Like Closure

Just one step closer to closure at a time—
one more court date over,
one less long wait slower—
one more inch along the way
toward happily afters and all better now—

or maybe grief is more a door
that never closes like a lock.
No permanent click,
no absolute end,
no gavel drop of perfect justice
to put the heartache behind bars.

It comes, and it fades,
and you learn to live
with a shadowed nuance
that sits on your shoulders on certain days
more so than others,
finicky like fog.

Over time, you learn to use your headlights
and pull your way carefully down the road,
even inside the densest cloud.
You might drive twenty-five miles an hour
when you have to,
but you never stop, not now.
You have somewhere to go,
goals shining like cities on the maps of your mind,
and you know that the light
always clears up later.

You squint through the grey
and the unanswered questions,
the rage and regret,
memories that won’t settle,

and in spite of it all
your foot hugs the gas.
You keep driving forward,
your heart full of past.

Poetry

Which Comes First

My husband is moaning with headache,
and I sit in noon stillness
and hold him close against my shoulders
till his breathing calms.

I do not move,
though the minutes do,
because he needs this rest and these arms.

And my ravenous boss
and the curse words steaming up from customers
and the deadlines and the hours
and the phone and texts
and the coming recession
are all screaming from edge to edge
of my psyche
that I’m off task,
I’m lost, I’m indulging in a luxury
and we both just need to suck it up
and keep working,
keep giving myself to everyone else
to achieve a higher reach,
a wider stretch of influence,

but I have decided to disavow
myself of the lies.
This is my family,
my life, and my right.

I don’t have a cradle or a kitchen
big enough to fit all the homeless and hungry
and angry and sick,
but I have this one hug I’ve been saving up
for someone just his size,
and he needs it now.

You can keep the infinite, exhausted sea,
because I’ve got my one starfish,
and he’s an ocean to me.

Poetry

What I Do and Do Not Know

I don’t know what gave you
the courage 
to feed your fear so completely,
to let that single moment
turn eternity-permanent. 

Maybe it was the demons
who had caught you with claws
and with shudder, forced your head under
a spell that you couldn’t resist.
Maybe the despair 
said a curse that you couldn’t unhear,
and you believed it,
those lies of never and better off
that your friends never would have 
believed about you, if only you knew.
Maybe you didn’t really mean to—
you were thinking about it,
but you didn’t think that you’d do it,
until your finger slipped too close
to an accident you couldn’t undo.

Or maybe it was just a stupid mistake,
like we all make,
only bigger—
like the fib we find ourselves defending,	
the one drink too many,
the best friend unfriended,
the baby in the belly at too young an age—
you did something stupid
in the heat of a moment,
but unlike us lucky ones,
you picked the one scar
that the years don’t let go of.

I don’t know why
you left me.
I can’t even fathom
what you must have been thinking,

but I can choose what I’m going
to go on thinking about you, 
and it’s not this.
I refuse to frame your face
with a casket;
I will not define you
by your dumbest regret.

I know who you were, friend,
despite what you did once,
and that’s what I hold onto
in the aching wide space that you left.
You’re laughter that crackled
bright songs past my static,
kindness incarnate,
gentlest friend,
and with you, I could stare down
an enemy army
cause you’d have my back
no matter what attack fractured in. 

That bullet? It happened to you, yes,
but it’s not who you were. 

I know your name,
and in my memory,
you’re still shining the same.
Poetry

If You Trace New Constellations, the Stories All Change

Moonlight drizzles over the eaves
as I stand under stars,
mosquito free

Every secret of the Milky Way unwinds,
unfurled across the sky tonight;
every nebula proclaims its name
in inky haze and cursive light,

and the strangest surprise
is that nothing is biting at my neck
as I incline my soul toward splendor.

I can’t comprehend it;
I’ve lost the language
for beauty sans pain.

I’ve spent my whole life
soldiering through so much blood sacrificed
for every ounce of glory gained—
a hundred mosquito bites per leg—
that I almost want to pull away
from this hint of a gift
with no shadowed price,
the air too comfortable, too calm
for me to trust
this type of bedtime story.

Some say that God’s heart toward me
is all goodness and gladness
rather than suffering.

But I don’t know how to hold that.
I look past the galaxies
into the blackness,
and that’s how I see God:
I squint past the obvious grace,
the neon joy
and the bright splash of planets
to focus on those parts of my past
where I floated in darkness,
lost in the gaps.

Suppose that God
isn’t the one
who sends me mosquitoes.
Suppose He tucks the stars
under my chin like a blanket
and blesses me into bed,
holding His breath
to see if I’ll relax against His chest
and sleep. I was never prepared
for a religion like this.
I’m still tense, but I’m trying
to lean in a little,

to know Him more in
quiet twilights and caramel drinks,
less in duty and grief
and Holocaust war.