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A rather sad poem about loss, playing around with the idea of identity and imagination. |
if a face could launch a thousand ships then I wonder what can a tear do? like the one I wasn’t supposed to see last year on the first day of spring. the sunlight cut across your face in unforgiving sharpness and I saw how you would look thirty years from now. but it was a moot point anyways, since you were decaying now in an explosion of loss. you wouldn’t look at me even when I said your name— instead, turned away like you couldn’t bear the sight of me and hid your face in your hair. and I despaired because I couldn’t get you to see. but I never could, could I? since you were blind in the first place. sweet sorrow was the name of the game and we were both experts at it counting the minutes of each day until the last one. desperate in our one shot at life before it was too late and so we grieved we laughed we shouted and I described the play of light across your hair (hungry) while your fingers danced over my face in a desperation born of love trying to memorize each line and curve before there was forever to forget. you loved water: on your fifteenth birthday someone gave you a miniature fountain and you made me install it in your room which had no outlet. I hacked and banged and screeched at the wall for being so solid and you laughed with me, at me. “you’re so stubborn, I can’t tell who’s stupider,” and you giggled in fits of hysteria and I was so glad to hear it that I really forgave the wall —really. we walked in a garden, your hand on my arm trusting that I wouldn’t leave you to your darkness, discussing why trees grow so tall. your views—optimistic my views—pessimistic our views—realistic. I watched as the wind touched your hair playfully tugging as if you could actually see it a war of you against the world was going on in your empty eyes but we both knew the true war was within and it was you against yourself. so on that spring day when you tried to hide your sign of fear from me it was the thunder of doom because you were giving up. and if you lost hope (you who refused to lose hope) then it was the end and I was lost. what could I do but listen to the sound of your mother screaming against Fate for having to suffer through such a thing while you begged her in a whisper to “calm down” but you! you had forever to calm down now and I needed to find something to kick to punch and destroy and kill because how could it live while you couldn’t in such an unfair world. and what could I do but watch, as you wasted away too tired to breathe staring at something you couldn’t see anyway until your skin made a perfect blend with the white of the hospital bed and the shadows under your eyes— Hell gates. when we buried you the rain thrummed against the plastic of your casket proving to me that there was a god because he or she or it wept with me for you. |