Your Shadow Invents You Every Time Light Fails to Pass Through You
Some days you wake to the sound of smoke pouring through
the keyhole in the room. Open your eyes. This is only a test. The bluing of
your hands can be anything you want. The bruised dawn
like a river rising to your windowsill. A purple forgetting how blood leaves
the body in ruin. A forsaken lip smeared in thirst resting on your lip
as though your skin could salvage the dream of being
so touched. Listen. I know you’re afraid—I am too. I know how the body
prays
for beauty but remains a shipwreck you are building in my image. How
many
books are enough to tell you you’re alive today? How many days end
up all dark & the monsters of your childhood appear like saints erased
of their mouths? How the mouth cradles a tongue carved by years
in exile until it’s ready to shape a word like a parting hand-
ful of promised wildflowers: Happy Mother’s Day. This is you
at the edge of a paradise growing back after being scorched from the face
of earth. This is us afraid of the men who fail to kiss us goodnight & step
through
the walls. Some days you are living a nightmare. Some days a miracle as
wide
as a spared life. Listen to me. There will be a day when the world will need
you
most—be alive on that day. I vow your father is as American as
the bones your mother grew inside you. The gunshot
in your head is only a shadow puppet, a slow explosion of a field
of qém’es in early June’s bloom. Look. Look at the colors like little gods
on fire—hurdling in & out of each other’s terrified skies. Are you still alone
in bed? Is it morning yet where you are? The smoke turns
to rain as usual. Listen, my love. This year is just a visitor & next year’s
ghost. Take care of it because yes—yes, you do deserve flowers for once
in your life. You will be the only one left. So hold my hand & call me
tomorrow. We are all here. It’s okay—it’s okay to be this
afraid. I am you. Can you feel that? Yes, that is the whole world outside
moving without us. But listen to me. Listen. Here’s the light
an arm’s length away. The ceiling reforming
above you, like another heaven after its own self-
destruction. Here’s my body & you stretching lifelong
toward every hole in the house
left as warm as a father running from
horizon to horizon. Don’t be afraid. Touch me here
where, some days, it hurts. Get up, get dressed,
open the door.
Source: Poetry (December 2019)