Spitballs
My grandfather’s tears pool on the computer keys
And he rereads his poem, which I’ve typed.
I wish I had the bravery to edit my own poems.
I prefer slinging them into the air like spitballs,
Pushing feelings out with a quick breath and an empty soul.
I like to put my grief into manageable chunks.
In this case, it doesn’t work like that.
It hits me out of nowhere, and suddenly I can’t see, can’t find the ground.
Her vertigo is a feeling I didn’t understand until now.
A lot of her feelings I never understood.
She was passionate in all the right ways
And active even when her body limited her.
She was smart in a way that made her terrible at spelling
But excellent at public speaking.
At her memorial, I mumbled and stumbled through my poems about her.
If I knew that my grandfather would be ok,
I would crumble back into myself, making my bed a breeding ground for anger.
I tell other people he’s ok, because, like me, he hates people worrying about him.
That’s why I keep my fellowship predictable.
Coffee in the morning, sitting at the dining table as he does his crossword.
Movie nights, Wednesdays and Sundays.
Watching the news at 6 o’clock.
I can tell he knows typing his poem was one of the hardest things for my fingers to do.
It hurt in a way unlike a paper cut or a blister.
It’s being pummeled with spitballs, labeled fear and running and eating and continuing to live the life she’d want me to.
My grandpa ended his poem with this:
This new world is not a brave one.