Birthday
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Passionate Undivided Fidelities

I used to fantasize about her dogs.

That probably came out wrong.

What I mean is that

I would walk in the park on clear October mornings

and imagine them chasing each other ahead of us

as we crunched arm in arm through the leaves

wearing cute autumn clothes.

In spring I passed a stand of cherry trees in full riot

when a sudden gust filled the air

with a victory parade’s worth of pink confetti

and they appeared from nowhere

darting and dashing and snapping at the petals like maniacs

while we watched from our picnic blanket and I played with her hair.

Mowing the lawn late one afternoon

my playlist included “Lover You Should’ve Come Over”

and my head cast them in a movie scene:

the two of us slow dancing at the end of a dock

against a backdrop of midsummer gloaming

staring into each other’s eyes

the frame of our closeup bounding both universe and time

until the spell is broken by the dogs

leaping into the lake beside us

soaking us with their splashing

our laughter lingering through the fade out.

I even dreamed of standing freezing at the door

in a sweater and underwear every morning of a long winter

while they did their business in the back yard

knowing I would soon be rescued by the softness and the warmth

of her bed and her arms and her lips.

In my heart they belonged to me just as much as she did.

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Uncategorized

Brown Thumb

I had time and I didn’t have you so I thought maybe a garden

Some distraction in the patch of shade beside the patio

To keep me busy (as though busy wasn’t always the problem)

The plants were delivered as sleeping bits of bare root and

I placed them in brand new soil

Marked each with a plastic sign labelled in permanent green

Tucked them in beneath a blanket of mulch

Surrounded all with a little wall as if I was in control

I carried water from inside every day, three trips of two gallons each

Because the outside spigot didn’t work and penance feels good sometimes

Every day I got on my hands and knees with my eye to the ground

Watching for any sign of bright growth

It was the sort of thing I would self-mockingly document for you

And bathe in your delight at my details

After weeks the sprouting began and then anxiety flowered

Because squirrels and chipmunks like to dig and

Snails and slugs have late-night dinners and

Each morning I woke up to find a mushroom farm

I paid these problems to go away but still

Nothing grew taller than my hand before dying

Leaves curl and wilt the same with too much water or too little

Tricky business when the air is feverish and dry for weeks

Shallow planting or soil leached empty by the trees or

My trying to grow too late, as usual

All I know is I have a garden of little tombstones

And nothing to do but wait for the snow

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Uncategorized

An Astronaut’s Dilemma

I was flipping channels the other day and The Martian was playing. It reminded me of this piece, which I wrote back in 2013, the year before the mass market publication of Andy Weir’s book and two years before the movie was released.

Imagine you are an astronaut on a mission to some newly discovered planetary paradise. Early on in your voyage there is a mechanical failure on your spacecraft and you are marooned, alone, on a barren, lifeless moon. Your capsule is well equipped, so you have air to breathe, water to drink, food to eat – enough to allow you to live out the rest of your natural days. You will survive.

Years of this monotonous, hopless survival go by. Then one day your radio crackles and flashes. Good news! A spacecraft is on its way to rescue you and take you the rest of the way to your mission objective. All you have to do is wait until the right moment and then launch yourself to rendezvous with it as it passes by. Of course, there’s a catch: this maneuver will require using most of your air supply as propellant and leaving behind all but a day’s supply food and water. You’ll only have one shot, and if you’re a tiny bit too early or a smidgen too late or just a hair off target … well, anything is better than spending the next few decades alone on some rock, right?

You’re filled with hope and excitement for the first time in ages. All day, every day you talk to the spacecraft as it approaches. You talk about everything, about your childhoods and your families and all of your favorite things. You talk about how you spend your days, what you’re thinking, what flavor of food goo you’re eating, what the stars look like where you are. And you talk to the spacecraft about the future, about all of the things you’re going to do when you get to your new planet, things you’re going to do together.

A few years go by (remember, we’re talking about traveling great distances here) with you falling asleep and waking up with the radio in your hand. You and the spacecraft talk less and less about the past now, and not much changes from day to day for either of you. Mostly, you talk about your new life together, and as reality starts sharpening the edges of that softly blurred and comfortable fantasy your launch date moves closer and closer with alacrity.

You don’t sleep as well as you used to. You doze off to dreams of a joyous rendezvous and the blissful time beyond but are jerked awake by thoughts poking you like a broken spring in your mattress (which is probably a slab of some space-age foam material that contains neither springs nor convenient metaphors).

What if the spacecraft isn’t where it’s supposed to be?

What if you reach the spacecraft and the docking just doesn’t work?

What if your destination is as lifeless and barren as where you are now?

What if the spacecraft is lying?

What if the spacecraft isn’t real and you’ve just been talking to yourself every day?

What if … ?

Then one day you’re staring at your monochrome landscape with its garden of uninteresting rocks and lawn of dull dust and you catch yourself thinking about how beautiful it is and at that moment you realize the proportion of doubt to hope has shifted. You need to radio the spacecraft and work out a new checklist of procedures and safeguards and contingency plans and –

It’s time. The vectors and velocity and trajectories and coefficients have all come together and the alarms are piercing your ears and lancing your eyes and punching your heart. You race to your escape pod and strap yourself in. You’ve rehearsed it in your head a zillion times but instead of the whoosh of acceleration that should be squeezing you into your seat you feel instead the motherly hugs of inertia. Your hand hovers over that big red button and you watch your window of opportunity narrow to a tiny slit. Now is your last chance.

Now.

NOW.

NOW.

Don’t feel bad. There’s a peace that comes with it eventually, and sometimes – when the light of whatever star that is hits the dirt in the sky at just the right angle – the sunsets are actually quite nice.

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Poems, Poetry

Was It Something I Said?

There were certain words you hated and made me vow to never repeat

I won’t even write them here even though you’re gone

Just in case 🙂

I joked that the only time I would ever use any one of them was all of them at once

A string of the objectionable that would be my way of saying without equivocation that I was done:

The Relationship Ending Sentence

I don’t remember that sentence but I recall enough of the words and even though a lot of them began with the letter “B” I know it wasn’t:

“I know busy. This doesn’t feel like busy. This feels like you’re done.”

Had I known that was another way to pronounce our apocalypse I would have written something else

Fuck I should have written something else regardless

Something about missing you and loving you and definitely nothing that made you think about being done

But I said it and days, weeks, months full of nothing came after it

Despite the thousands of other words I sent in hope of rescue

I kept telling myself you were waiting for some specific date but the obvious ones were just as quiet

There was no gift at Christmas

My birthday wish didn’t come true

New Year’s brought no resolution

Our anniversary (pick a date) came and went

I thought for sure you were holding out until one full year had past

That seemed like an appropriate sentence for an inappropriate one

But you’re not committed to the calendar the way I am and you never will be

Oh, wait:

I once went silent for a year and a half so maybe your plan is to one-up me

I’ll dream that dream to make waking up a little easier but who am I kidding?

I’m already writing a poem called “February”

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