No one mentioned Debbie’s name at
work. “What happened?” Jonah would ask himself
in the mirror each night, just after he brushed his teeth. One moment she'd been standing next to the
cart, complaining about tropical oils. And the next, he was holding
the perfect strawberry in winter, talking to no one. Only Bill, who Jonah sometimes came across in
the cafeteria during his coffee break, said to Jonah,
“I’m sorry about Debbie, man.” Jonah
pretended not to hear him. He just asked
if Bill knew who had won the basketball game.
Friday, 28 October 2016
Thursday, 27 October 2016
Corners
I met her at the cafe where I liked to read the paper in the
morning. At the time she struck me as
nothing special—just another smiley college student waiting tables over the
summer. Only after she gave me the wrong
coffee three days in a row did I really pay any notice to her.
During her rambling apology—“I’m so sorry, I just can’t
remember if the white doily means vanilla or regular, I keep thinking white has
to be vanilla and then I think, no, it’s the opposite, and then I get myself
all mixed up”—I didn’t know whether to laugh or tell her to go away. In the end I did neither. Eventually I would come to wish I had done
the latter.
Jumping
Erica
calls me a couple of days after Thanksgiving.
We talk for a while about work and debts and boyfriends. I thought I knew everything but now I realize
I know almost as close to nothing as you can get without having fallen here on
accident from another planet.
Wednesday, 26 October 2016
Addiction
I left
you
I did
that
was me who limped behind
who
whimpered and begged as
fear
threatened me blind
but I left you
yes, I did
Your
voice now I must ignore
oh, and
it sears and it soars, and it
roars
with the ferocity of a
jungle
cat
because I left you back there
with the imploring stare
on your face
yes, I did
Old
truths fill the
black
hole where
I
buried the leaking need
for you
I know
all about incurable wounds
So much and for so many weepy and
lonely afternoons
I meant to leave you
for so much, my friend
and I did
It cost
me the destruction of an atomic rage
poisoned
the air with its smoke-orange memories
maybe it will melt my blistering heart
maybe it will leave me to freeze in the
drift of its nuclear winter
when the
death that crouches in wait for me
crouches
close for you, too
forgive me for pulling this scratchy
scarf
over my eyes
forgive me, love, because I was made
to leave you
and I did
The Weight of the World
It was a difficult, silent drive back to my mom’s. When I pulled into the driveway and turned
off the ignition we both just sat there, until Michael said, “I’m sorry you
feel I let you down. But the important
thing is that now you know what you’re dealing with. You can’t go back to him.”
“It’s not that simple.
You aren’t even sure about what happened with Cheryl,” I retorted. “And if he’d treated her that badly, she
would have wanted the divorce, not fought it tooth and nail.”
“The psychology of domestic abuse is a strange beast. Otherwise why would you even consider staying with him?”
“It wasn’t domestic abuse.”
“He broke your arm.
He made you quit law school. He
doesn’t let you have any money, and you can do almost nothing without his approval,”
Michael brutally reminded me. “If that
isn’t domestic abuse, I don’t know what is.”
“Well, you might feel that way, but I don't. I think I owe him another chance," I said, and opened the car door. This conversation was over.
Tuesday, 25 October 2016
Looking in
This is not how I meant it to be.
This was not who I meant to become.
These are not the memories I
expected to replay in my
head
as I remembered who
I once had been.
Triumph
In
the red straw network there is:
*no
hope
*no
telling
*no
entrance
*no
exit
*no
talking
*no
timeline
*no
travelling
*no
sharing
*no
smoking
*no
milk with cereal
Thank
you for respecting the rules. Carry on
with your business.
But
your legs get a little bit heavier. And
the strings get a little bit longer. And
the knots feel a little bit tighter. And
the joke gets a little bit harder to laugh at.
A
harsh beautiful place, this memory horizon.
If you squint your eyes you can see the moon.
There
isn’t much I can see anymore.
I
am losing. You don’t just suddenly stop
losing. You think about why you’re
losing, you despair that you are losing, you blame the universe for losing, you
write self-pitying poems about losing, you come up with reasons why losing is
not really losing, you give yourself pep talks about losing, you brainstorm how
to stop losing, you develop five-point plans to halt the losing, you wonder if
we are all really losing, you become heavy and tired with losing, you think
maybe if I get a haircut I won’t keep losing, and then you find that after all
of this you are still losing. And not
only are you still losing, but you are now losing by so much that winning
becomes unrealistic, so you start coming up with easier goals, like
“accepting,” or “taking small steps” or “adapting.” But in the end you will just be losing again.
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