passive
these new meds
make me feel worse.
i don't want to get up
or move and
i feel so numb and
dulled and even
visiting with friends and
talking with family and
playing games and
doing things i'd normally
find fun, i'd normally see as
reprieve from the
numbing ache of
depression--all of it
is clouded and dulled and
subdued and it's no longer
reprieve. it's the sluggish forward
stroke of an arm through water
in an indifferent but desperate attempt
not to drown.
to not get
pulled beneath the
waves while struggling to
even move my lungs to breathe
and struggling to do even
the small things keeping me
alive--it's hard. i have to keep
moving, but it's so hard
to gather up the
push. these meds don't help,
i don't think. but neither does the pain,
which only
increases with the more
i do. but i can't stop moving
lest i
drown.
i can't stop moving or
i'll drown. i have
to keep moving
or i'll
drown.
(i gotta keep going, you hear?)
child haunted (i want him gone)
he haunts me!
i am torn apart
and cracked wide open
by his overwhelming presence
that clings to
my side. he towers
over me in a
desaturated red glow
and i've tried
drawing him, as if to set him free,
as if to separate him from me, but
he only clings closer and pulls
me beneath the water,
trying to drown me. his hands
grope along my body
and i scream and cry and
wish i were dead. i am
only a child. i am only
a child. i beg and plead
and ask this not to be real
and then i wonder
if it even is, or if this is
merely my brain trying
to process my (yet)
(unfounded) fears. i
try to write poems
about him, and i
draw him, as if he
will leave me that way. i
haven't seen him in years. i see
him now as he was
when i was nine,
ten,
eleven,
twelve,
thirteen. supposedly
he is now living his
best years, wrinkled and sad
and looking sickly and pale.
i wish i could erase him from
my mind forever. i want him gone
and gone and gone and gone.
i don't want to know if he
did those things when i was
a kid. i don't want to know
what he did or why or what
he said or when he did things and i
don't want to be this confused
anymore. he was gone !
he was gone in my head--
an afterthought, a last line in a poem and
the last words to an answer.
yeah, he's my--
he's my--
i don't want to say it! he was
gone! he was gone! i want
him gone again, and i--
i'm sobbing, clutching my head
in my hands.
why would i do this to myself?
why would i say that, yes, he
might have--probably did--could
have--would have--did those
things to me,
a child,
a child,
a child. why would i
forget,
only
to argue with myself
in disbelief later. why would i
hide this from myself,
if it even happened, and why
would i let myself
hold such disbelief in it?
why this
war?
(i want him gone already. can he)
(please be gone again)
(please? please--please could he)
(be gone again? make him)
(leave)
there’s a hole caving open in my chest when i tell my grandmother about the fan
when we lived with him,
i woke up very early each day.
in the mornings, to pass the time,
since i was afraid of being alone with
him when no one else was awake,
i would read alone in my bed for hours
until someone else woke up, too.
every morning, while it was just him and
i awake in the house, he would watch the news
and eat cornflakes and drink orange juice and
read the newspaper. i was hungry, of course, at this
hour—i was a growing child—but i wouldn’t stir from my bed
except to pick up a book and to
turn a page
and another
and another
and so on, until someone else woke.
when he got up from the table, though, i would hold my breath. he was
three rooms and a hall away, but i could hear him,
somehow. i would hold my breath. if i heard
the clinking of his silverware to his bowl, he was
taking his dishes to the sink. if not, he was headed straight
for the bathroom. either way, he would
inevitably come back down the hall,
flip-flops sounding strangely across
the wooden floor in his slow, steady gait.
i would have slipped my book under my blankets and
turned slightly onto my side by the time he reached the hall,
my movements silent in practiced ease. my eyes would have
been closed not even a second later, my breaths
carefully evened out into those mimicking sleep.
as he moved down the hall towards our room,
the room with my siblings and i, i would clench a hand into
a fist beneath my blankets, along the
spine of my book beside me, and i would focus
on the
sound
of the
whirring
fan
above
our
heads,
even as he came closer.
he would stand at the open doorway to our room and
stand
there
for
m
i
n
u
t
e
s.
i would keep breathing, just the same, just as evenly, just as
methodically as i always did in these moments.
sometimes i still wake up
paralyzed
by the
sound
of the
whirring
fan
above
my
head,
it’s not a turkey’s fault
when i eat
this meal, i’m
supposed to be
thankful.
when i eat
this meal, all
i feel is i can’t breathe—i—
i can’t—i can’t breathe, i—
as he sits beside me, i feel
this feeling subside. one
must breathe, after all.
i must, to survive (him).
each bite is
torture. each movement is
calculated, tense,
pent-up energy. but i
have to appear
relaxed. fine. okay. it’s
what i have to do (to)
(survive). he watches me eat.
i feel like i could die, i think, stuffing
down a bite of turkey. i hate it, so much.
it doesn’t even taste awful—just—i—i—
i can’t stand it—i—i can’t—
he makes me take some of the cranberry sauce.
it’s sour. the stuffing eases it, some, but i
have to mask the expression of me about
to throw up from the texture and i
have to swallow this bite hard. i have
to keep it down. he makes me eat
the slimy green beans. there’s
weird stuff on them, making them
too salty. they’re a bit limp. they fall
apart beneath my fork. i shovel them
into my mouth. he watches me eat. once
all this is done, i take a long, long, long
drink of water. i turn to that
buttered roll on my plate, and i
savor each bite. when i ask for another, he
says, “after some more turkey and green”
“beans, maybe some more stuffing, too,”
“and if you’re still hungry, then sure.” i say
nevermind. i have to wait until
everyone else is done eating
to be excused. he
watches
me
sit
there. he’s smiling wide.
it’s not a holiday’s fault
there’s a yellow light and
it’s too hot and
very cold, all at once.
i’m frozen in place,
grimacing in pain,
stood to one side and
unable to move.
he stands a few feet away,
deceptive smile in place.
“excited?” he asks, looking
to me. i quickly pull a smile
across my lips.
“sure,” i say. “you know what
“i like.” he doesn’t. he doesn’t.
he doesn’t. but i don’t
dare say otherwise. i move
robotically to the dining
room, sit in my seat
(always beside his)
(always in reach of a punishing)
(hand. a punishing kick.)
i sit in my seat,
sat on my hands. i stare at
the table—think to myself,
i should probably offer to
set the table. i feel like i’m
going to die, sitting here, waiting,
but i don’t get up. i might
break something if i try
to set the table. so i just
wait. back is ramrod straight.
breaths are hardly there. eyes
trained on the moving grain of
the table. at least at my aunt’s,
she begrudgingly makes me
mac and cheese alongside
the traditional thanksgiving dinner.
i hate eating in november, i think. he always
makes me eat the driest turkey
and the slimiest green beans and
the sour cranberry sauce and i can
only have one buttered roll. and i
HATE EATING STUFFING. i could die,
i think, if he makes me eat
one more thing.
he might kill
me if i don’t,
though.
he finally calls me to set the
table. i go into the kitchen,
feeling like every step is one closer
to death. i ask what’s for dinner, so
i know what to grab. “turkey,”
he grins, “and green beans, with stuffing.”
i nod. “your favorite,” he says
with a laugh. i laugh emotionlessly
along with. i grab enough plates
and enough silverware. i lay out the plates
like he instructs, and i place the silverware
just how he likes, except for
at my place, which he allows, only because
he makes fun of me each night for it anyways. i go back into
the kitchen for the potholders. when i
pass by him, my
breath doesn’t come out
on the exhale. i
can’t breathe. something always holds me
back from breathing in his
presence, and i—i—i—
i don’t breathe—i don’t
breathe, i don’t—breathe, i—
i can’t, i can’t, i—i don’t breathe, i—
i grab the potholders and move
away from him. he says something,
laughs. i laugh along, having not heard,
but his tone indicates i should
laugh. so i do. next i get drinks. i
refill his, not breathing as the
water fills his cup. it’s
hard to breathe on my
way to setting his cup down at
his place. when i finish with the
table, i sit at my place,
sat on my hands. back
ramrod straight. eyes on the
moving grain of the
table. breathing hardly
at all.
i mourned you
before even knowing you
were dead. i talked with myself
in the past tense
for hours
about you. i grieved
the fact that i know you
hated me even in
your very last breath. i
cried and cried and cried and
i turned my music up loud
to drown out the thoughts--
my brother is dead, my
brother is dead, my brother
is dead; a mindless loop,
a quiet repetition
that opened a yawning
cavity inside me
at the thought of going on
while you couldn't. while
you weren't.
i woke up this morning
to find you were
alive--had made it back home
in the dead of night.
i see you come down the hall
in your baggy clothes
with your messy hair
and dark undereyes,
and while i know you're alive,
my only thought is that you
aren't. that i already mourned you,
that i already came to terms with
the fact that you hated me to your dying breath,
with the fact that i would
never hear you again
and never have the opportunity to
see your smug smile once more. the
thing is--i still don't believe i have
those things. you still hate me.
you say you always will.
you don't smile at me--haven't for
years. i've been mourning you all that
time, but last night i truly
thought you were dead. that
was a different kind of grief.
still, when i look at you,
i just see a ghost. i don't know how
to stop mourning your death. i
don't know how to not think to
myself
my brother is dead, my brother is
dead, my brother is dead.
(forgotten)
i.
i wish i felt like
i have a place in your life--
that you want me around and
that i'm not just someone
who's just there,
or who's good for comfort
and not anything else.
(it hurts how many times)
(this has happened before)
ii.
when she comes around, i close
my door--i put heavy things behind
it and i turn out my light,
and i lie quiet in the green darkness
of my room until she leaves.
she pushes at my door, knocks,
calls my name, and she only
leaves me be when my
uncle comes down the hall and
pulls her from my door.
she wanted to give me flowers and
a book--she doesn't remember
that i'm allergic, though. she doesn't
even remember coming by, the
next day. i hate how much
it makes me want to cry.
iii.
my therapist says it will
take time for me to feel comfortable
with you, and to feel like i
can trust you again. she tells me
to be patient. (i'm trying--it's)
(hard.) when we call, i purposefully
fade into the background
like i can somehow
not exist in the space with you,
as if that could help anything
(i don't know what). i wait
and i wait and i wait
and you tell me it'd just be easier if i
existed. i'm hesitant.
(who knows if that's what made you)
(leave in the first place? i think.)
iv.
it makes me sick to my
stomach to think
of her dying, or getting
alzheimer's--not because
she would be 'lost' or 'gone,'
instead i feel sick at the thought
that soon i'll be the only one
who knows what happened
and what we shared. i don't
want to be the only one.
and even now, as i know she's forgotten
so much, like what books i like
and that i'm allergic to flowers,
and when she's even tried to see me,
i don't feel as trapped in the memories
as i know i will when she
dies or truly forgets me. someone
else has to know--has to know that
it happened and that she was
drunk most of the time, that
she made me pancakes and grilled cheese
and ramen and mac and cheese
because i liked them,
and that she drove us places even
when inebriated. someone
has to know that she
frightened and scared me,
that she made me sad and hurt,
that she hated all kids but she liked
me, that she rarely won monopoly to me
but she always played because it was my favorite,
that i cried for three months
when i heard she never wanted to see
my family again, and that i still
took the dvds of the movies we
had planned to watch, and i took
the m&ms, too, and i ate them,
because i wanted her to think of me
when she couldn't find them.
it took three months before she
did remember me,
and even then, she didn't remember
telling us she never wanted to see us
again. i couldn't understand it for
the longest time, but now i
suppose that when you're that drunk,
you might not remember the things you say or do.
even so, i don't want to be
the only one who knows
that happened. i don't want to be alone in those memories. she's
not there, and i don't know if she
ever was. but i don't want to be left
alone, back here in the past.
v.
i'm told i should try to be honest
with you. it's hard.
i just want to fade into nothingness
when you're around, and i don't
know why, but it's hard not to
do that every time.
how do i make myself want
to exist in a space with you,
where i'm as loud and comfortable
as i am with my other friends? i
don't know, but i feel like it might
hurt you if you find out how i am
with them. i want to be comfortable
with you and trust you again, i
really do, but the desire
to be nothing when you're around
is so overwhelming it hurts to breathe.
afraid of the dark
there's a memory, buried deep
somewhere. i'm not sure where.
in the memory (as fractured)
(as it is), i've been
left behind in the
dark. i am terrified of the
dark. i won't be caught
dead in the dark. whoever has
left me behind
in this memory
knows that. i know that
they know. and, yet, the
only thing going through
my head in this
memory--aside from the panic
tearing at my skin and the
suffocating (other) feeling that
is swallowing me whole and
has me choking back tears and
holding a hand over my mouth
to keep quiet--are the words from
the person who's left me
behind: "don't be dramatic,
it's just the dark--it's childish and
stupid of you to be
so afraid of this." i have been
left behind as a
lesson, of some sort. i
do not know how long i'm stuck,
alone, in the dark, but i know
i get out, at some point, breathless
and searching for the arms of
the authority who decided
i needed the lesson. their arms
are not welcoming. their arms are not open for me. they ask me,
"now, was that so bad?" and in this
memory, i know that if i say
that, yes, it was that bad, i may get
put back in the dark again.
so i shake my head
in the memory and i
close off my expression and i
separate from myself for who-
knows how long. the memory has
many duplicates, adjusted over
time and different in each but
somehow still the same--the
same fears and hurts and the
same type of words and the
same sort of separation from
myself afterwards. i am still
afraid of the dark.
december 1
pull the key from the door,
hold yourself up and take a breath
it's okay, i'm telling myself.
i can't hear your voice any longer,
can't feel the cold at my back
or my feet tangled with the sheets
the world has ended, it's over now.
it's all okay.
i'm starting a new life now,
writing a different story--one you're never in,
one where i'm fine and you've never hurt me--
and a new world has opened up
i hardly think of you anymore
the smell of listerene doesn't catch me at the door,
i can breathe again when i see your name,
and i'm ready to take what's left of me and reclaim it
i'm pulling the key from the door,
standing tall and breathing deep
i'm turning from you and those long halls,
turning from all those memories and all those
lost hopes and dreams, i'm ready
i'm ready, i'm ready, i'm reclaiming that child i once was
and i'm giving her a different story