Give Me till May

You come from Latin meaning away from
and that’s exactly where I’m sending you—
away from me, from my scale, from the fears for my future
take my backside with you and
don’t let the door hit you on the way out
because I will beat you
work you
crunch the tar out of you
until you’ve vanished
and left only
the smoothness of muscled skin,
the absence of all my baby fat,
and the delicious satisfaction
I will taste with my hungry eyes
every time I look down at my belly.

Friend Divorce

We are adults now, though you always said we wouldn’t be. It’s not like I don’t think of you now—you know I always will. But it isn’t the same as before. It is not a longing that haunts me, a need for you, unfulfilled, that I had for so many years. It is a vacuous space in the crevices of my brain, at the back of my day, behind picking Isabella up from school, behind folding the laundry, grading papers, hearing the latest gossip at school, trying to have a conversation with Bruce… you are still there, on the edge of my thoughts.

You creep in a bit more when I am having a problem. I think about the long pages of words we have exchanged over the years, and sometimes I can still bring tears to the edges of my lids when I think, Oh, I cannot write this email… and when I try to replace you in my mind with another person to consult, I will admit that I still have trouble. But in a way, even this wordy absence is a blessing, though you probably wouldn’t see it that way. It forces me to reach out, to reach beyond my usual circle, and seek the advice of others, open my heart, my soul, to other friends, and realize that it is possible to move on.

Sometimes I think about all the coping books and media out there, the large section of self-help books, conferences, television specials, the availability of couples therapy, everything geared toward self-improvement or marital bliss. And I wonder, where did we go wrong? Not you and I, in particular, but our society. We are so centered on our families that we forget the importance of friendships. And what is out there to help people cope with the loss of a friend? What self-help book discusses friend divorce, or even attempts to explain it? Just as marriages fail at a fifty percent rate, I think friendships slip away, sometimes quietly with the passing of time, years, marriages, children, sometimes abruptly with an incalculable explosion of anger, at a much higher rate.

I know I am not the only one who has lost a friend—in fact, just the opposite. It seems that the more people I speak to of you (I am allowed to do that now, you know), the more I realize that we are all going through the same thing. And I stand by my original ground, the ground I defend so adamantly with my stubborn ass, that I think this is all plain ridiculous, and there is no goddamn reason in the world why people just “grow apart.” Everything is a choice in life, and you did not choose me.

We were at the zoo today and ran into an old friend of Bruce’s… his friend divorce. Not exactly the same situation as you and I, but right beside it. It’s like seeing an ex. There he was, wife and kids, there with another couple and their little boy, smiling and cracking jokes just like always… But it’ll never be just like always, because he chose them over him, over us, over all those times we went snowshoeing or hiking or hung out in bars on Friday nights… and no matter how many times we try to explain to ourselves that it’s not our fault, we’re always going to think it’s our fault.

I’m telling you, someone ought to write a book about it. Friend Divorce: How to Cope, How to Move On, How to Make New Friends. Because we aren’t on the playground anymore. We don’t have the social appetite of teenagers wanting to escape their parents. We have jobs and children and bills and aging parents and the general heaviness of adulthood weighing us down, keeping us back from the risks we were willing to take as young children or adolescents. We need skills, new methods of meeting people, of opening up ourselves in a way that will lead to the strong friendships we were once so fearless to develop.

It’s funny how I write to you, to you of all people, the one person in my life (my former life) who will never read this. Our friend divorce has been final for six months now, I think. And I am still working on moving on.

January Daughters

Mythili, 5
she has the same deep-set eyes and heavy brows,
the same rounded nose and thick pink lips as her father,
but as she sits beside him at the table,
shyly peeling every tiny piece of white from the Clementine
and piling them, meticulously as a worker ant,
on the table,
as she raises her eyes and offers me that
quiet smile still filled with baby teeth,
then takes a moment to rediscover what her
older, loud-mouthed sister is up to downstairs,
I know that truly, she is my daughter.

Isabella, almost 7
in an instant she can recite the alphabet in two languages,
always trying to fill in the letters for her sisters;
she lives for her Girl Scout meetings,
hates when the neighbors pick on her
to the point that she will pout and want to cuddle
like a toddler in my lap,
and she always, always, always
has to be the boss, be right, and be defiant,
as if to remind me, day in and day out,
just who I was at age seven.

Riona, 3
don’t mess with the youngest who, upon a recent approach
to a button outside of an elevator,
screamed, “It’s my turn!”
her hands outstretched like miniature wings
in her oversized puffy purple jacket,
rushing in front of two older sisters
her eyes sharp and holding perfectly a glare
that belongs on a much older child,
and proudly pushing the button
before anyone else could go near it.

Ode to Snow

I love the way you whisper across the sky
and just as gently touch the skin of the road
in swirls as graceful as ballerinas,
dancing away from the tires that try to pound you.

I love the way you quietly decorate the trees
more picture-perfectly than a white wedding cake,
more idyllic than the solitude of dreamland,
frosting my eyes with your sparkling glory.

I love the way you arrive without arrogance,
sliding in from your silvery satin clouds,
snatching the cold from our hearts and
trapping its truth within each flake.

I love how you slip into conversations
sometimes filled with excitement and joy,
sometimes filled with a terror or fright
that people recall for years to come.

I love how you selflessly offer yourself to the world,
how, catlike, you sneak in and make this time,
this place, a different shade of happiness,
bringing us all a beauty that we could never create.

Concessions

From the Latin concedere, to completely yield

1999-2002

stop here and I will upsell you
a giant buttery tub as wide as a hug
a soda that weighs as much as your baby
so much candy you might puke later

but you’ll enjoy your theater experience
that much more because I suckered you in
because you yielded to your desires
and footed $25 more than what you paid for tickets

and as you hand me your card or cash
I’ll ignore the stench of BIB’s and
the slippery tractionless popcorn-filled floor
and the palm oil that permeates the air

smiling all the while as I earn my $7.50,
paying my way through college with this
thankless job, knowing that I can concede
to your audacity because one day I won’t have to.

2008-2010

my era of admission has come full circle
as step after step I tread as carefully as a crane
just like the paper ones that dangled,
pale blue and innocent, along the church aisles

now both of us have shed our naiveté
and the truth seeps from our souls
through black and white keyboards,
drunken words, and the wrath of darkness

in my mind I have seen both sides of this story
each one conceding to the other in a series
of twisted images that I can neither sleep through
nor accept when my eyes, paralyzed, pop open

yet, from this moment I recapture the past
and though I cannot change the path I led it down
I see you in the shadows as if for the first time
knowing that I can completely yield to our love.

Insomniac

slightly heavier breathing and hardly a movement
my sluggish canine stealing every bit of my space
distant planes rumbling across the stars
the hum of intermittent cars two blocks away
the slamming of the neighbor’s door
the padded footsteps of a nocturnal beast
red alarm clock numbers glaring at me

everything to keep me from my dreams, my peace
everything to keep me trapped awake
in this nightmare of my current reality.

Ode to Hospital

Version One

It’s not about the money
it’s about what the money could have bought
the floor that needs replacing
the new kitchen in my bigger house
the prevalent, closest dream
of taking my kids to Disney

and I’m so stupid in having
already told them
already filled their minds with
images of Cinderella castles
and hugging Mickey Mouse

It’s not about the money
it’s about our credibility
our trustworthiness
about the thousands of dollars
we have already footed

only to be knocked on our asses
because they can’t send the bill
to the right place
because no one sent me the right card
because they charged us for something
that we didn’t do

and I see it all in a broken
jar that we will
never be able to fill
and no matter how hard I work
no matter how carefully
I pinch my pennies,

for reasons out of my control
I cannot fill
that cracked glass,
and it’s cutting me,
not the money,
to pieces.

Version Two

I am here now
but not here
somewhere else
lies my mind
not in the pounding skull
not in my aching heart
but elsewhere

wish I could find
the place that
is sticky sweet with warmth
the windless sunny day
that smiles on my dreams

but I sit with my rump
hardened
the pain shooting through my veins
a deer in headlights
words escaping out the door
to chase the thoughts that
left hours ago

my vacuous smile
sucking the life from within
and all I want,
everything that my soul desires,
is too far away for me to reach.

Fairytale

What I wanted

after that last sip of pink elixir
was to take her hand in mine
and relive my seven-year-old memory

following one sister, two cousins, and an aunt
through a stone castle
nestled in a Connecticut forest,
over a drawbridge
and along a shaded path

when, already filled with wonder and delight,
we discovered a cool and calm river
that could wash away the
hot humidity from our sticky summer skins

and without even running the idea of shame
through our innocent minds,
we stripped off our clothes
and took our birthday suits into the water,

splashing away with our made-up games,
relishing in every second of each other’s excitement,
basking in the glory of childhood.

What I received

after too many heavy swallows,
a single moment of longed-for glory
in the exhilaration of a blue moon snow

was my perfect world taken away in a sentence,
a wee-hours confessional that chipped away my soul,
and the realization that
I am all grown up

and I can never wash away the truth
that hides like a red-eyed predator
in the depths of the forest
that surrounds the castle
that is a fairytale of
everything I ever wanted.

New Decade, New Attitude

I am going to write every day this year, starting yesterday. Really I am always writing in my mind, creating characters, thinking up poetry verses, describing the snow as it lingers towards the ground… But now I am making a commitment to writing, to stepping it up, making my dreams happen, write here, write now. So here’s my first poem, for my stubborn butt of a three-year-old:

Potty Training

You stand on piggy-fat legs
shamelessly letting loose
the pee you promised me wasn’t there
ruining my carpet once again

I carry you to the top of the stairs
your thin blondish hair billowing
against your tender cheek
and all you do is giggle your shame away,
look up into my browns with your mysterious hazels,
and whisper, in quiet three-year-old desperation,
“Mama, I weawy wuv you.”

And once again,
despite the frustrated tears that sting me from inside,
I cannot be angry with you.