--BEING
AFRAID SUCKS
I’m
So Glad You Came
Today
I am blind
looking
into white infinity.
Just
six days ago
a
dutiful doctor with
square,
squat teeth told me
it
was nary time.
When
I laughed at that
he
said, “It’s okay to be afraid.
We
all are.”
For
many years I had insomnia,
waking
up in pitch dark,
the
house a foreign land with
no
hint of where to grab or hold onto,
and
now the sheer nearness
of
the end
is
very much like that.
I
hear the door open--
click
and sweep and close--
but
nothing more because
they’re
afraid I’m already dead.
Even
blind,
even
teetering on the ledge
with
burning toenails,
I
tap on my hospital mattress,
“Please
sit. There’s room right here next to me.
I’m
so glad you came.”
Too
Many Men
There
are too many men
inside
me
trying
to escape,
each
one too slow or clumsy,
cowardly
perhaps.
They
like it here,
hiding
in the chaos and bramble,
playing
Hide N Seek,
Tug
of War,
Russian
Roulette.
Now
that I’ve grown a beard people
tell
me I look like Jesus or Lincoln.
Who
I am is never who I am.
I
don’t know the difference authenticity
and
an orange that’s been bit into.
Am
I saying too much?
Does
this scare you like I thought it would?
Now
let me tell you the worst thing:
I
never loved you, not like that.
Instead
I was too weak to walk away,
too
many different people inside my head
saying,
Marry her. Marry her. She’s as good
as
you’ll ever get.
Jetsam
and Flotsam
I
sit on a sidewalk
listening
to the rain,
how
it sounds like
chicks
pecking on the pavement
as
a thousand cabs slog by,
sloshing
a filthy rainbow
of
water over me.
We’ve
taken cabs
up
and down this same street,
over
the Brooklyn Bridge
to
Bryant Park.
You
said, “The rain is nothing to fear,”
even
as the floods came,
boats no longer moored,
boards
like broken bones,
the
essence of what was once us
nothing
more now than
jetsam
and flotsam
wafting
away with the rising tide.
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