love letter to the sixteen year old who wants to be a martyr
come here. the world is not an ocean
to fight your way through tirelessly.
i think my hands will fit in yours
because this is what hands were made for
if not to hold other hands then to hold
the paintbrush or the pen or the bread.
just as our backs were made not to be
sharp and bulletproof but to shimmer
at the sight of the decadent sunlight.
you do not have to bleed to be alive
but when you do i will clean your wounds.
let us follow the ritual we have done
for hundreds of thousands of years
and that is waking up in the morning
and kissing the blue sky and being alive.
come here and wash up on the sand.
we can have love in the middle of this war
with ourselves. we can lie in this bed and
sleep in the middle of the churning sea.
but please when you wake do not think
of the body like a mission. do not think
of tenderness like a conqueror
with every sword drawn and polished.
the world, your world, is not a battlefield
nor is it, again, an ocean,
nor is it a prairie
full of birds taking flight - as much
as i would like it to be.
there is no cross waiting across the river
there are no crowds waiting to watch you ache.
there are, of course, people waiting to love you.
think of the hands and what they are made for
and the way they refuse to die.
know that in your sleep while you dream of knives
they trace your face still
and they do not draw blood
but rather memorize the fluttering of your eyelids.
this, i think, is the song they sing in church
on the good days.
where the sun becomes its own blessing.
death has a thousand of its own songs
but none of them have made it extraordinary.
i think of a country like a body
and a body like a country. i think of her
destitute, i think of her lonely
i think of her sinking to her knees
when grief floods the land
with that merciless high tide.
suffice it to say that if grief is a god
then i no longer know what to worship.
if the sunlight is a god
however every morning is a prayer.
in summation when all my bones are broken
my knees will be the thing which i fall upon
and when i look up from the cool earth
i want to look upon something good.
in the meantime i think of you, going to every party
in the dress you wish to die in.
i think of you under the moonlight,
white lace like a war flag shivering like a soldier
so that if you were to fall into the swimming pool
and never return you might at least be remembered.
you were glowing, once, but not like this.
you were a radiant thing, but not here.
the silver glint of the sword
is not sunlight, nor is it stars.
you are praying to the wrong god.
to be human is to want to be something else -
god. ocean. bluejay.
empty stadium swelling with the ghosts of applause.
i’m sorry that you’re angry over this.
over all the things you are not all the time.
i’m sorry that you dream of such decadence
all through the night - making monsters
out of men while your hands
make air out of air out of air.
while you dream of biting that silver bullet
and spitting it back out at the world.
because what are you
if you’re not angry? who are you
on the nights where you do not dream of blood?
i will remind you: your hands are not curled into fists
while you sleep. we have been over this.
while i clean your bloody knuckles please
tell me a story and leave out the parts
where you were too cruel to bear.
tell me what is left after the bruises fade.
find a story about love buried in your chest.
are you afraid you will see the sunlight?
so much of it that you cannot turn away?