The Looking Glass Self
A poem
I.
One year, a procession of cardboard boxes,
the hereditary lances I discover on my tongue.
Barbed reaching for not my milk in not my refrigerator,
still bleeding in the doorway
of the concrete depot that houses everything
I wish to burn and resurrect in turns. I witness myself
becoming who I think you think I am; I train myself
on a jingle of reminders:
water is the only element that reflects light
back at its beholder,
the center of the earth is traversable by breath,
it is none of my business
if a pendulum's nature is to touch each boundary
again—
again—
again.
I am always reaching towards
the past, finding it's a junk drawer jammed midway
on its track, that there is a lot inside I can't bring myself
to throw away.
II.
I find evidence of trespassers. A path has been trod
through thorny overgrowth and creaking bamboo
to arrive at my bedroom window. Are they my
thoughts? A horror, the familiarity; yet
they made home where I would not.
The average hummingbird weighs less than a nickel.
I commit myself to the joy of the moon, to knowing what I like
in a neighborhood, to carefully composting the detritus of opinions
that have trespassed upon me.
III.
Here, the years fold into each other
like an
origami fortune teller.
Each paper flap
conceals a younger story,
eight ways to seek.
IV.
Wherein I learn that
speaking a litany of no's is
one way to know my own heart. There
is a sweetness revealed by the novice mind's
proclivity to over explain its process. I let
my no's undress themselves.
V.
At night I wonder if I could gather
aliveness from memory's
red orchard, preserve enough joy
in jars to last each liminal winter
I have left.
The memories are sentiment and skin.
I try
to sum them to the feeling of filling a page—if ideas
could spark in the absence of bodies, if aliveness was only
the idea of bodies, I could be
the orchard.
VI.
Each morning, I wait until the kettle
expulses
a new cartography of steam.
It is either true that survival precludes devotion
or devotion is survival. I am sure that the lie
is a warning.
VII.
A woman invited me and six other strangers
to her home. Enclosed by a family of
Sequoias, we learned to see what was good
in our writing. Cocooning in
cream and lilac fabrics
we lifted our mugs
from knotted wood tables and drank
the apothecary warmth of each others' praise.
Sensory details!
Our cohort finished as eight boxes on a screen,
sipping tea from a quarantine of living rooms,
wondering our uncertainties out loud.
VIII.
At the border crossing between selves,
a clerk dressed in disinterest slides a form
across the counter.
Choose:
Identity, or art?



Comments (1)
Stunning performance! 👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽 and this line really sung: we lifted our mugs from knotted wood tables and drank the apothecary warmth of each others' praise. 🤩