I have no sons; I've only birthed
daughters, each given a distinct name.
Sons can be named after their fathers,
and their fathers' fathers before them.
A Junior; the second, third, fourth.
Perhaps a remnant of kingly practice?
Keep it all in the family— the name,
the wealth; power, property, influence.
Such inbreeding among royals was once
thought to be the cause of haemophilia,
though really the disorder is due to
a mutation in the genes. Rare clot,
flower blooming beneath the skin:
whose eulogy do you serve? Which
rebel thread pulls away, thickening
to scroll its own emphatic calligraphy?
Evaporation
"Are you – Nobody – too?"
~ Emily Dickinson
A man falls asleep in the deep
folds of a department store massage chair,
and no one notices. It's dark when he wakes,
still inside the store now empty and shuttered
for the night. It's not something he intended
to do, and is mildly embarrassed at the attention
it generates. Whereas, there are apparently
people who choose to disappear from their lives,
even hiring "night movers" to spirit them away
without a trace to a different and undisclosed
location. In Japan, they're called jouhatsu,
which means evaporation. They let go of their
names, every material possession they ever
owned; their jobs, their network of friends.
They even let go of their families. Some
disappear to save face, because they can't
live down the shame of a terrible mistake.
Some have become disenchanted with their old
lives, others because the weight of existence
is too much though death isn't an appealing
option. Their sudden disappearance makes it seem
as if they simply evaporated into the atmosphere.
But they still have bodies; many of them may be
floating around in big cities, in plain sight—
pale and anonymous as sadness that can't be
tied to any particular thing, with no need
to answer to the call of anything other
than the overwhelming desire to withdraw.
The Loss of Time
When is it a metaphor, and when is the blue
curtain just a blue curtain, a car stalled
on the road just the result of a bad battery and
not a cosmic memo about never getting to where
you want to go in life? There are three days
this summer when the moon's orbit will once more
place it at its farthest point from the equator;
this causes the earth to spin much faster, resulting
in shorter days. But what astrophysicists mean is
shorter by milliseconds— the loss of time may not
even be immediately noticeable, until a half
century from now when perhaps we'll no longer
have 24-hour days or 7-day workweeks. Other kinds
of losses might only seem inconsequential—the hairs
on your head, the thinning of sparrow populations.
The decline of honeybees and wildflowers from habitat
loss. Do you wonder why it's so difficult now
to hear the whippoorwill sing its name, signalling
the end of the season of loneliness or frost?
Abide
When I no longer care
about the world, let me
sit on a rock perch where
my hair can be
combed by the wind.
When I no longer want to bind
my breasts with cotton and drink
from an orchard well, let me sleep
in a room without clocks
in the middle of a monsoon.
The days are full
of horrors and lamentations,
nights with visions
of banishment and exile with
no hope of return.
Yet deeper blue than the sky,
hydrangeas keep rewriting
a narrative of ordinary survival.
Their dry, petaled heads persist,
even in the absence of water.
This Old House
Articles on home maintenance warn about breaks
in the plaster: how they may be a sign of something
more serious in the foundation, or that the soil
underneath has shifted and softened through the years,
or both. But it's simply the way things go as they
get older and more worn. Chips in the stucco,
scratches on once smooth sanded floors. When
we moved in, this house was also already old.
Having been vacant for some time, it was as if
the pipes sighed awake from a long drought
the first time we ran the showers and flushed
the toilets. The realtor found a small nest
of rodents in the crawl space, and called
extermination services. We learned new words
like soffit, fascia, and transom window; and also
that the modest, side-gabled Cape Cod style dates
back to the 1800s. From the floor outline in the apron-
sized dining room and a full window set into the wall
behind the hutch, we can see some of the original
bones of this house: how and where more rooms
were added, even as closet space remained the same
for times when people may have had a need for much
less in their lives. In summertime, men in shorts
and baseball caps knock on doors in the neighborhood,
asking Do you have spiders, mosquitoes, ants, and
are they a problem for you? We always turn them
away. Sometimes, a tiny green grasshopper comes in.
Sometimes, a cricket trills unseen in a corner.
Moths are our favorite— we like to think they're
visitations from our dead, gone so many years but there,
like a glimmer of something precious in the cracks.
Short List of Transient Luminous Events
Where the cannula eased out of the vein,
an oxblood bloom against pale skin.
As above, so below; and so between.
In the garden, everything seems poised
to ripen; but that means there is still
also waiting. If you walk around a tree
whose foliage is so thick all its lower arms
are bending, you just might find
a hidden opening. And yes there is war, there has
always been war; it is impossible to turn
away. Yet amid the unpruned rosemary, new shoots
of pine and even elm. This is just the earth's
habit: not invasion but proliferation. A plume of heat
and its tendrils shooting up above the atmosphere.
Chosen Family
Once, a fish slid its sinuous body
into the sea's cloud cover;
it was taken to task
for not appearing before the gods. For keeping
its own counsel,
it received a lashing of bones.
I feel a natural kinship with it, but also
with the lizard
skittering through a labyrinth
of landmines and guillotines. Kinship with
the orange-blushed
mountain shrike and its constant
alarm of krr-krr-krr, and with ghosts
of innumerable histories thickening
the air
that we breathe— Lock eyes with any creature
you meet: the current
you feel is felt by them,
too. Some are more expert at shedding
their skin when it no longer
serves them.
what was your original face?

Revelation
~ after Remedios Varo (1955)
Within each time, the contemplation
of time. Devices for its calibration
and measure, the recognition of how
it holds up the sky in whatever quadrant
we might reside. See how many points of
existence want to push through the membrane
of this life. All the actors gathered here,
garbed in their own choice of armor,
must hear that electric humming in
the atmosphere. Strings of tin-can stars
waterfall in the room. How thin the border
between states: outside and in, love and labor,
quiet and clamor. The world is no longer
beginning to change. It has changed.
The Big One
is what they call the energy
that will sunder the plates
which have more or less kept
us in place in the only lifetime
we know; is the massive swell,
tsunami that will rear its head
above cities and towns then
make the noise of a million rushing
bees. Plumed emerald basilisks
freefall from their perches to kiss
the ground before it disappears.
Then they'll skitter across water,
runners looking for the finish line.