"You Don't Know What Love Is"
For Rebecca Feldman and Brian Roessler
That's what the first line says
 of the song I've been playing all summer
 at the keyboard—trying to get my hands
 around its dark, melancholy chords,
 its story line of a melody that twists
 up like snakes from melodic minor scales
 that I've also been trying to learn, though
 I'm no great shakes as a practicer of scales.
 Come to think of it, neither am I much
 when it comes to love—no great shakes, I mean.
 Not that I haven't had my chances.
 Twenty years married, I made a lousy husband,
 half asleep, selfish, more like a big baby
 than a grown man, the poet laureate
 of the self-induced coma when it came to
 doing anything for anybody but me.
 "Now and then he took his thumb
 out of his mouth to write an ode to
 or a haiku about the thumb he sucked all day."
 That's what I imagined my ex-wife said
 to our therapist near the end. She did say:
 "It's all about Bill." She was right.
 And suddenly it frightens me, remembering
 how, at our wedding, our poet friends
 read poems of (mostly) utter depression
 to salute us. I wondered if their griefs in love
 had double-crossed our union, if strange
 snakes in the grass of our blissful Eden
 had hissed at us, and now I worry,
 on your wedding day, if I'm not
 doing the same damned thing . . . .
 I haven't come to spring up and put my curse
 on your bliss. Here's what I want to say:
 You're young. You don’t know what love is.
 And as the next line of the song goes, you won't
 —"Until you know the meaning of the blues."
 Darlings, the blues will come (though not
 often, I hope) to raise their fiery swords
 against your paradise. A little of that
 you unwittingly got today, when it rained
 and you couldn't be married outside under
 the beautiful tree in Nan and Alan's yard.
 But paradise doesn't have to be structured
 so that we can never reenter it. After
 you've kicked each other out of it
 once or twice (I'm speaking metaphorically,
 of course), teach yourself how to say
 a few kind words to each other.
 Don't stand there angry, stony.
 Each of you let the other know
 what you are feeling and thinking
 and then it may be possible
 to return to each other smiling,
 hand in hand. For arm in arm,
 you are your best Eden. Remember
 the advice the old poet sang to you
 on the afternoon of August 4, 2001,
 the day you got married.
 May you enjoy a good laugh
 thinking of him and his silver thumb
 now that you've turned the key
 into your new life in the beautiful
 Massachusetts rain and—hey, now—sun!
Copyright Credit: Bill Zavatsky, "'You Don’t Know What Love Is'" from Where X Marks the Spot.  Copyright © 2006 by Bill Zavatsky.  Reprinted by permission of Hanging Loose Press.


