Chaparral
You must remember the time we drove
to the mountains inshore from Malibu and
saw the coyote.
It is not something you can forget.
But we always did remember different things
in different ways.
Why, just the other day, I was thinking how
the first time I met you, I was high,
sitting against the wall of a stranger's apartment,
a stranger who turned out to be your brother,
and you sat beside me and we talked
through the comedown.
But you always say that was later, that's not
how
we
met;
instead, it was at the warehouse, under the lights
and the camera. No, I would have remembered that.
Forgetting is secretly a blessing; most people
struggle and fight against forgetting, as if
every
little
thing
is worth holding onto. Remembering isn't so
great, either, I grant you. But to forget is to
do yourself a favor.
I chose to forget that coyote had a small child's shoe
in its mouth as it darted across the road, but I couldn't.
You saw childish things everywhere: a shopping cart
reminded you of a stroller, a napkin was a bib.
I still remember the name we picked out, I cannot allow
myself to forget that. What is the use
of forgetting something like that?
Nothing is easy, nothing is hard.
Remembering to forget takes will, takes memory.
Forgetting to remember, now that is the trick.