Balloons

Balloons

Grieving, I believe,
Is so delicate, and fragmenting,
Because it is
The understanding that
We are bound to love,
All ways…
Deeply,
Profoundly,
To wear a widow’s wedding band
As its tourmaline dulls,
To walk those rooms in which a widower
Could not stop crying, pressing his palms
Into the floor
And loathing the linoleum
Because it reminds him that
His love and body
Are real,
Wracked with the sorrow
That we only withstand because
We are forced
To continue
Cherishing,
Remembering.

Children send letters,
On balloons,
Into persimmon twilights,
Watching the words
They dare not say–
But write instead–
Drift towards the heavens
That look so cold to them…
To heal the hurt
That crusts over
Like marmalade on the jar’s rim;
They love ruefully,
Bungling with the buttons
On their shirts
Because a parent
Used to dress them;

We feel grief because
We are saying goodbye
To the moments we live,
The seconds,
Third glances,
Final embraces,
The feelings, thoughts,
Farewells we’ve yet to accept,
That dawdle alongside us,
With untied shoes,
Long before Loss picks up her child
In a minivan;
And then,
The heaving of a broken heart ebbs,
Tarnishing,
Like a silver teapot,
Until Longing polishes it alone,
When a dog loves unconditionally,
Or a paramour plants praise like
Crocuses in snow;

The orchestra swells in tragedy…
The conductor weeps, too,
Knowing the song must, inevitably, end,
So she loves
Until the final note’s echo
Joins the balloons,
Letters,
And every airy and feeble hope
That our hearts
Would hold less.

I Wander, and Wish, That Love Would Last

I Wander, and Wish, That Love Would Last,
And nothing could sever you from me,
But this world hurts everyone willing
To reach out and touch it; a spindle,
Spear, or guttural glass of everclear.
I’ve drunk too much, again, and choose
To see things blur, you blur,
And I wish, and wonder, how broken
I got to be when we carved our names
In that tree on Sycamore Street;
I miss things, languish, ponder,
Pounce on every hello with strangers
Just to feel something other than the
Crystallized honey stuck fast to my
Memories; when the leaves bud,
I think of how the branches brace themselves
To lose, siphon, spread their fingers, only
To watch the nails fall off, green, gold,
Heavy as a heart.
You said you loved me as a leaf caught
In your hair,
I fished it out like a deep-sea vent,
Bubbles, burning, branding me to you,
And then you chose to leave me here–
The tree’s gone, too.

107 Degrees in D.C.

They breathe steadily, rhythmically,

Against my chest, 

As the world melts;

Their eyelashes graze my chin–

Two sets of petals–

Rosy as the day flowers, ablaze

In rivulets and revolts,

Conflicts that cause

The pain we never hope

To hold in our arms,

Like we do these twin

Babes, swaddled in

The mirth and murk

Our world breathes–

The sun, she burns

Our eyes in honey.

I Love You So Much

I Love You So Much

It hurts. It hurts me

To be around you,

Watching Mayflies

Die in each other’s arms

Near the lakeside.

To see you shimmer

Makes me shiver,

As water wets the sun in silver,

Because I cannot imagine

Life without you,

Which hurts more;

The cracks in the car window,

Where rain puddles in the handle…

I have to go,

To let go,

Knowing all I ever wanted

Was to stay.