Think back to the day you received the phone
call when ___ was brought to the hospital. What
was the color of the sky before that moment
and then immediately after? Where did the smell
of smoke come from and why couldn't you
get rid of it for days? And think back a season
before, when snow had not yet covered
the ground: the hinge of the box was folded
shut; its cadre of shapeshifting griefs
still lay inside, either quietly or harnessed
to unknown purposes. You must try hard
to remember in any aftermath, even these
once had bones wanting to become flesh,
wanting to be named, called to, forgiven.
Existential
The interviewer asked: if you could,
would you do it, what one thing would it be
that you might change? This is never a fair
question, because of course you know you can't.
You won't ever fit again into that size 8
sheath dress, so give it away. You won't
have gone into that other degree program;
you won't have managed to avert one
stupid decision or another. A thought
experiment is only as good as the score
you expect to get after the exam; and
as you've come to know, expectation
is a false prophet, a bad tarot card
reader who can't tell a cup from a can
of soup or a fool from his shadow.
Everywhere, someone wants a new
beginning. And everywhere, someone
wants something to end. In Long Island,
a hundred thousand ducks were recently
euthanized because of avian flu. Red-
breasted and common mergansers are washing up
dead on Lake Michigan shores. How do you rewind
to the particular moment before the needle went
haywire, before plagues were incredible stories
from a different century? You tell her you wouldn't
change a thing, though looking at what you've already
lived through from where you are now, it's like you
get to feel it all: all over again, a second time.
All Things Pass
Will it always be like this? her daughters ask
in the throes of a visitation from their own despair.
She doesn't feel like she's lying when she says no—
didn't Heraclitus say all things pass and nothing stays?
"A visitation" sounds like a fleeting thing, though
like bad news it might land with a thud on the roof.
Heraclitus said all things pass and nothing stays—
they swirl with the current and the current flows.
The world's bad news lands with a thud on the roof—
black-suited company of crows, shadows warping the view.
They swirl with the current and the current flows.
What does the moon portend? Do stars bristle with knives?
Morbid company, drab-suited couriers of the shadowy
view: don't you tire of their gloomy spreadsheets?
The moon rises in the sky and stars speckle with light.
Their river's dark indigo. They don't stay still either.
She wants to shred and ball up these sheets of gloom;
she's not lying. Nothing might stop, but we won't stop.
The sky's dark indigo river goes on and on—
Why should anything always be the way it is?
Bahala na si Darna
There's a difference between saying
Bahala na— Leave it up to fate— and
Bahala na si Darna— village girl turned
Wonder-Woman-type avenger.
Bahala na— Leave it up to fate— can mean
crumble in the corner like a stick of chalk.
Or you could swallow your fear, turn avenger.
Moonlight reveals monsters in every tree:
they want you to crumble like chalk in the corner;
they want you to believe nothing can ever be safe.
Yes, monsters are about, no longer just in moonlight.
They want you to give up, drown in a river of despair.
They want you to think nothing can ever be safe, but
they can't look you in the eye or give a straight answer.
They only want to wear you down, drown in a river of despair.
But you can wear your silence like a gleaming stone amulet.
They can't look you in the eye or give a straight answer.
Remember how Darna had everyone's back in the village; she
cultivated silence like armor, wore truth like a gleaming amulet.
There's a difference between Bahala na, and Bahala na si Darna.
My fingers touched
wood burl in the sheath
of a pen. Parchment curl
and light brown outline
of leaves in the calamondin
that's put forth flowers
but not yet fruit. Fish-
scale that leaped, still
iridescent, from a body
in cleansing. Barber's
scissors with hair caught
in the teeth. Out in the yard,
only the chipped end of
a trowel as I dug in shallow
soil, covering the scat
of animals that came in
the night. Nylon guitar
strings, until the heat
one summer popped them
right off the fretboard.
That winter
there were those bent
on destroying
everything
holding the world. Rows of potatoes
softened to grey in the fields.
Globes of citrus darkened,
moons
waning in orchards.
Hot wind stung our cheeks. Our
children learned to compose
elegies
for the bees. One of them
dreamed we were stuck in the caves
of our homes, and only one
person at a time
could leave
to search in the town for salt
or sugar or oil. We tried
to keep
our griefs small,
yet they bloomed like fractals
inside a veil. The differences
between us came
down to this:
who let the cold turn to stone
in a vessel, who chafed the vessel
with burning hands.
Tunneling
To be a stone, or
a plant, or the root
at the end of it— vascular
network pushing through
granular earth like a miner
tunnels toward ore—
Blind and without guidance,
moving through resistance
toward any faint echo
of moisture; the water
table beneath mycelial
layers, long growth
of the centuries, no sun
but that deep heart
you'd hear coming close.
Body by then
worn to bone, the mind
a flickering torchlight.
On Lunar New Year
Eat something sweet. Neither cut
your hair nor trim in half
the noodles in the soup. Swap out
the sad-looking fruit in the bowl;
buy some plump Satsumas. Decorate
a plate with orange sections,
a spoonful of rich blood stew,
a fragrant mound of rice. Lay this
offering on the counter before
pictures of those who've gone
ahead. Isn't it marvelous they've
retained an appetite for things in this
world? May we who've known the labor
of life have such abundance.
Wearing the Beads
Long ago, I rode a bus twelve hours
to a town up north cordoned by limestone
and canopies of pine. It was December,
morning frost glazing the cheeks of cabbages
and fingers of bean. In the guest house, there was
no heater— only a large metal drum filled with cold
water in the bathroom, a pink plastic dipper
beside it. But I wanted to wash off the dust
from the journey, before walking to the canteen
where the innkeeper's wife offered peppery
smoked blood sausages and cups of brewed
coffee. She asked if I wanted to see her basket
of heirloom beads, and we went upstairs.
I fingered heavy strings of banded agate and
carnelian, traced the brittle curves of shell
and the interlocked keys of dried snake
vertebra. She asked if I wanted to wear them
for a picture, stacked over my bare breasts
as they used to do when this world was
still theirs. I'd come to understand what
she meant when speaking of such loss,
and how blood is not only the animal's
signature across our everyday rituals,
but also one of the cords that tie us
to the world of ancestors. People still
thread gleaming orbs of pig hearts
and lungs with twine— offerings to hang
in the branches of trees. By nightfall,
these film over with rippling wings.
In the village, I'd hear the dark
timbre of gongs. Even now, the sound
is clear in my mind. After I left, I felt
sorry I'd passed up the chance to feel
against my skin the stones that tumbled
from one generation into the next.
Ode to the Long Haul
"Feeling is a kind of thinking, and thinking
often comes from feeling." ~ Eula Biss
During the thousand and one nights she told one
tale after another, did Sheherazade ever think
That's it, I've come to the end, I can't do any more?
Every scene and plot complication suspends time and
disbelief— she makes drawing from a well of inexhaustible
story seem magical and easy, especially when you consider
the stakes. Every twist, every detail puts one more nail
in the coffin of death (who always has an ear to the keyhole,
a twitchy hand on the sickle). I admire most her composure,
meaning both the act of composition, construction, and
arrangement as well as a calm disposition: the way she
doesn't let her mind freak at the threats made by
the petulant bully in a king's costume, the way she holds
fear and wonder side by side and lets them do their thing.