Electric Jump Start
a morning ritual,
a Friday baptism
by Chicago summer.
my
toes align
with the edge
of the concrete beach,
the 7 am sun already beating down
over the city skyline in the distance.
hundreds of strangers in swimsuits
standing neatly in a row,
the collective
boom boom boom
of heartbeats and stillness
in anticipation
as we wait to rid ourselves
of the sins of winter.
a megaphone
a countdown
a psalm of sorts
3…2…1
jump!
and I do,
plunging straight into icy waters,
engulfed in
cold
and nothing else.
mind frozen,
legs desperately kicking
to break the surface,
I gasp the warm morning air.
I emerge
to an uproar of belly laughs
and cheers,
a celebration of rebirth.
I’m not the same
as I was
only moments ago on the ledge,
unfamiliar with
the holiness of
the communal ice bath,
our bobbing bodies
passing smiles
and brushing limbs
as we tread in the clear depths
of Lake Michigan
together.
heart racing,
adrenaline coursing,
I look toward the sky.
I feel awake
I feel alive
I feel anew,
anointed with
an electric jump start.
Saturday morning
Slow dancing in the kitchen alone,
swaying side to side,
sweet mango to my lips
in my oversized tshirt
and underwear
coffee brewing on the counter
a splash of sugar syrup in my mug,
cat on the windowsill staring in amazement
as I glide across the hardwood,
eyes closed,
to slow songs meant for weddings,
not in love with anyone
except myself.
happy
happy
happy
Lately
I sit alone on the back porch
surrounded by pots of purple,
newly planted begonias
and the sky swirls with hints of pink
as the sun starts to set
over the rooftops and cable lines
of Wicker Park.
This is one of my favorite spots.
Home.
I’ve spent a lot of time here this past year.
Too much.
I sit with a bowl filled to the brim
with strawberry rhubarb crisp,
my mom’s recipe,
still hot from the oven,
topped with a scoop of vanilla ice cream—
I knew I had to make it
the moment I stumbled across
fresh rhubarb at the farmer’s market.
I slowly savor
each bite,
letting the ice cream melt
faster than I really should.
I don’t care.
It tastes like summer.
I close my eyes,
spoon in mouth,
and let the silence of the past year
shift into the sounds
of my neighbors
playing Paul Simon on their guitars next door
and the hearty laughs
of the people eating
on the restaurant patio downstairs.
This is what the world feels like lately—
Flowers and dessert
and acoustic guitar
and laughs
and a little bit of magic.
I scoop another bite with my spoon.
I smile.
I sit alone on the back porch.
I’m not the slightest bit lonely.
Bleachers
They say there’s no crying in baseball,
but tonight I almost broke the rules
during the 7th inning stretch
because we weren’t stretching our legs,
but rather our arms
around each other.
Touching.
Yes, touching.
Swaying.
Singing.
Taking in maskless breaths
and the pink sunset over the scoreboard
at Wrigley Field.
Take me out to the ballgame,
take me out to the crowd.
It’s been a long time since I’ve seen a crowd.
The song carried through the stadium,
a sweet cacophony of voices,
a harmonic cry of freedom.
I smiled
and belted out singing
and my heart swelled
knowing two things for certain:
life is better
with vaccines
and baseball.
Easy
“What’s your favorite color?”
you ask me
and I freeze.
You laugh
because I’m thinking too hard,
like there must be a correct answer.
No one has asked me that
since I was a kid.
Ironic—
because the way you’re making me blush
whisks me into a world
of childlike whimsy
where time disappears
and suddenly I have
nowhere to be,
nothing to do,
but stand here,
watching you
cook us scallops on your stove.
“Oh man,” I say, “I don’t even know anymore.
What’s yours?”
You shuffle to the sink.
“Easy,” you say.
Being with you is easy.
I admire the rag over your shoulder
and your soapy hands—
you don’t even let me help clean.
I pour us another drink.
“It’s yellow.”
And somehow it makes sense
when you put down your glass
and shift your hips toward mine
and smell the bourbon on my breath
and lean into our static
and pull me in
and press your lips to mine
and for the first time,
my heart bursts
into Yellow.
Riots
They’ve been screaming
and we’ve put in headphones
playing songs of privilege,
pretending it’s not our problem
and drowning out the pleas
to please
make it stop.
But this time
when the blood hit the streets,
the blood soaked our hands,
and the cries were no longer enough.
Instead,
they sent
Smoke Signals
to the world—
buildings up in flames
to match the fire in their hearts
hoping if we watch our cities burn
maybe this time
we will LISTEN.
Dear God,
We better fucking listen.
#blacklivesmatter
Shelter in Place
Just when I thought
the Sun had betrayed me
to shelter in place
somewhere deep in grey clouds,
her sweet kiss
brushes my shoulder
and wakes me from a restless night of sleep.
The shadows make way
for her gentle sweeping hand
golden
across my face.
I smile.
She keeps me company
and I drink in her warmth
and nestle in the neck
of her yellow light
and I’m reminded
of patience
and blue skies
because she always comes back.
She always comes back.