The Yes Places
For me there have always
been the yes places
I know them before I
get there
I am always on the
slowest train to yes.
I know the yes places
will receive me as
well as I have mapped
them in my heart.
They always do.
There are, of course,
others. How the thread
unwinds, tangles.
When I leave something
behind in a yes place—
a gold ring, a book,
a lover, say—
the yes places never mind.
They fold my lost things,
over and over, until they
disappear, until their shapes
no longer appear on
my heart's map and
I can trace each skyline
as I please.
It's wise to pack light,
the yes places say.
The dark will find you,
wherever you roam.
Latch the suitcase.
No need to bring
anything from home.
Invisible
Love—
let's name it—
is not for me what it is for you.
Love, my love,
is something altogether linear—
or would be
if only I hadn't tangled the wire
if only I hadn't strung myself up
if only I hadn't strung you out
if only I hadn't hung the Polaroid of you
on the wall, and then from the moon.
My love, love,
is Point A and Point B—
I cannot coil the useless love I have for you
into the circle that would knit
Point A (me) and Point B (you)
into kiss, kiss, reprise, finale.
Once, an endless number of days ago
two lovers lay in Washington Heights
atop Ikea sheets drenched in lilacs atop
a bed atop a parquet floor
(desirable, insisted the realtor).
One lover said to the other:
What if I love you more than you love me?
One lover did not say this. One lover
said nothing at all. Perhaps there was
a smile as fleeting as the soiled August
breeze leaving its sooty prints on our sill.
Do you remember who you were,
which lover?
Do you remember any of it?
Now, I am the din outside that once-window,
I am buses and cars and schoolchildren and
bodegas and basketballs and babies.
In other words, my love,
I am just out there, of no particular consequence
to you, just the noise of your periphery.
And everyone knows
you cannot see noise.
Speak to me
Speak to me, first, of absinthe
and pork belly. Your calloused
hands say I have done most things
and you, woman, will be next.
Lean in. Tell me a secret I have
never been told. Linger by my ear,
finger a lock of my hair with your
usual carelessness take me or leave
me you could go either way
You will never be mine but
only children count people.
Not Love (A Sestina)
Yes, I would rather sleep alone than fight
and this is why I sleep alone. A drunk?
Not too late, my first last career. I write,
suits the job. Alone, I am a word sea
dotted with empty bottles. As for sex,
I vaguely recall. I liked it with you. Love—
damn that beast! No prerequisite for love.
It needs nothing, not even us. Why fight
when I could sleep on it, on you, have sex
in a dream with a belligerent drunk,
then wake to your gentle coffee? Your sea
is still my sea, though “you’re right,” I won’t write.
I am saying, dear, who gives a text? Write
what you want, or don’t write at all. I love
our love for its constance despite us, sea
change after spare change. I don’t have the fight
that you need to keep you in check, no drunk
fists, battle scars. I choose sleep over sex.
No, our tongues will never touch again. Sex,
I would trade for one sentence from you. Write
of love that’s sailed with no plan for port. Drunk
on wine or waiting, I remain your love,
still mute, still dumb. No hope, no cash, no fight.
I remain your love across idiot seas.
Poets write this way and so do drunks. Sea!
Grief! Lost shoes! The Titian mound of her sex!
Laugh with me. I have given up the fight.
This sweaty, besotted poet who writes
limericks ’round wounds? She bleats of you, love.
Yes, you have rankled this poet, this drunk,
so she will no more speak of what was. Drunk
on my bitter horsetail brew. Allons-y,
and see what I mean? What lasts: only love.
No sail or oars, she’ll stay afloat. But sex
we have some say in, still. Don’t you dare write
of her, on my side of the bed. I’ll fight
only then, bar fight in my brain. I’m drunk
on waiting for you to write. Heart at sea,
no due course. Sex, we have some say. Not love.
This silence
This silence would be deafening
if you could hear it, still.
It broke you years ago, when
you were seized with a fit
of wanting needing so violent
you dug your way out through
your own skin to escape the
stunning cruelty of the
everpause between the
asking and never receiving.
You bled yourself in
payment for what did not,
would not come.
You did not think to ask
for a receipt.
Maybe this silence was
always deaf to you too.
Imagine that:
a deaf silence.
The world becomes something
altogether kinder, if we know
nothing exists that can hear
some of us, and not others.
There are those who swear
they hear, and are heard.
They insist that this silence
excavates their fossilized prayers—
readily willingly mercifully
just in the nick of this time
and that time too—
from somewhere inside the black
crevasse of palms touching.
You have stopped (almost)
longing to be one of them.
You are alone.
You put yourself to bed
at night and listen to your
own prayers as they
whimper, then settle,
in the dark.
You are the only one
who can hear the four-letter
words howling fire
and spitting bile
and leapfrogging
in your belly.
You are not mute (yet)
but you know better (now)
than to ask this silence
just one more time
about the unanswerables
the unmentionables
the unhaveables
the unavailables
the unassailables.
You are nothing much to everyone in particular.
You are no one's one.
You are especially nothing to a few.
You are everything to two for as long as
it will be until you are not.
Yes, this silence
would be deafening
if you could hear it,
still.