Inventory of What Remains
A meditation on memory, identity, and the quiet discipline of becoming

I.
Three winters ago, I labeled my grief
and stacked it in the hallway closet—
winter coats, unmailed letters,
a jar of buttons without their shirts.
I mistook preservation for healing.
Salt does not forget the ocean.
Wood remembers the shape of fire.
The body keeps minutes
no clock can translate.
I was diligent in my archiving.
I called it maturity.
II.
There is a staircase inside me
that leads to rooms I outgrew
but never emptied.
Dust rehearses the choreography
of light through blinds.
I open a drawer—
find versions of myself
folded like old maps,
creases permanent as fault lines.
The tectonic plates of want
shift without permission.
III.
Some mornings I drink water
and imagine it polishing me from within.
The heart is mostly muscle.
Muscle responds to repetition.
Again—
forgive.
Again—
release.
Again—
begin.
The discipline of tenderness
is less glamorous than fury,
but it builds better shelter.
IV.
In the grocery store aisle
I choose fruit by scent,
pressing gently for ripeness.
How strange that I never learned
to do this with joy.
I mistook intensity for aliveness,
mistook noise for truth.
V.
If I could distill survival
into something portable,
it would not be armor.
It would be a small orchard
growing in the sternum—
branches patient,
roots fluent in darkness,
bearing sweetness
without asking permission.
VI.
Tonight, at the border crossing between
who I was
and who I am rehearsing,
no clerk waits.
Only a mirror,
fogged by breath,
and the quiet instruction:
Carry what nourishes.
Leave what performs.



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