Pain turned me

Pain turned me inward
and calcified me in spirals
like a saltwater shell
echoing its distant chorus
of breaking waves.

I spoke in repetition,
harmonizing with barstools
and a decade of lyrics 
memorized in foresight. 

I beat the eardrums
of old friends and hard drinkers,
until we slept together
in the white noise. 

But that endless din
became a shelter
for my sore throat,
still raucous and acid,
to find its melody.

Slowly and singing
my bitter tune,
the empathy I lost
in self-preservation,
I regained in double.

Home does not come

Home does not come to me
in careful images of my memory,
but in distant, violent flashes
like a psychic vision
of some grand former life.

And I am reincarnated daily
by London’s expanse,
fresh imprints of
hot reds and greens—
neon and christmas and curry.

But Seattle’s black sidewalks
still cough with smoke,
breathe with moss,
and brighten the back
of my eyelids.

I would possess Oklahoma too
in these astral projections
but avoid chance encounters
with the unkind spirit
of my past self.

I was a nerve

I was a nerve
vibrating in the dark
when we first ignored
the imperfections
of each other’s bodies
and then, with enough practice,
forgave the imperfections
of our own.

I was my age
but halved or doubled,
holding back an explanation
for my scars, a narrative
for my roughness
in shape and texture.

I was a cold body
prepared for internment
and I never thought
to categorize each muscle
as developed or undeveloped
until I showed them to you.

I was an impression
of alive, awake, and sober
as we met in the space
you gave me.

The water stood

The water stood, clapped black rocks,
bowed, and retreated.

I fought to keep my head above
as the horizon bounced endlessly.

Three swimmers leapt
from volcanic cliffs into cold chop.

Their brown bodies strong
in white, neon, and aquamarine.

One watched me, hoping
he would not need to save me.

I foamed and spat salt. The roughness
tossed me lightly and caught me hard.

I swam until current raked me to shore
and I stood tenderfoot on red sand.

A new capacity opened in me,
a space and ache I had forgotten.

The stones settled, a woman sunned,
the wind sung and I evaporated.

Compartment

Wooden box on tiny shelf,
purse within a purse,
or distant desk drawer.

Nothing more honest
than learning where
the condoms are kept.

Ink

After explaining
your hand tattoo,
you leaned over

and whispered,
”You’ve had poetry
on your dick.”

I'm tired

I’m tired of not being able to say
I love you after sex,
tired of having
to wake and separate
your things from mine.

You inhabit me

You inhabit me fully
like the late August sun
when it soaked us both—
clothes and skin,
grass and iron,
drenched in orange.

You gave me the shine
from your cheeks
while our breath met
in salt and sweat
and I held your scent
in my lungs.

American Spirit,
lavender, and your
warm, wet sweetness.

Yellow

You gave me your yellow sunglasses as collateral,
a promise I would see you at least once more.

The frames, oblong and comical on any face except yours
with lenses that give only a hint of shade.

They are with me now
on my new continent across the Atlantic.

You did not honor the promise, so I keep them
half in spite, half in hope.

Half a bottle

Half a bottle of wine was not enough
but the whole bottle is too much. 

How quickly we, the broken, forget
our friends’ love, while the narrative of heartbreak
hardens into a truth we can accept. 

Eyes shut to sunlight and saltwater
in the Sound, the pine green disappeared
with the lines of a woman’s face. 

Half the night alone was not enough
but the whole night is too much. 

Let internalization end today, 
let compassion return to my arms
so I can help my brothers. 

The blindness is temporary
as color returns with force. 
Gold morning, red afternoon, blue night. 

Half a mind and heart is not enough
but I cannot offer more.