Your flight leaves at 7 a.m., he says. I couldn't figure out how to add a bag. You take a deep breath, run through the annoyances you needn't say and ignore the news that tell you security lines are beyond the pale. What is reality, when there is starlight and happenstance out there? When there is whimsy and surprise?
You speak clearly into the room that you haven't an outlet, stand impatient in the midst of your shortcoming and haven't yet reached the problem-solving stage when he fixes it for you. Just like that. Sometimes you think being seen is the greatest gift we can give each other. She runs into the bar to for an encouraging hug, before it's time to go home and tell the children. We do not use words like stages, like prognosis, like five-year-survival rate, but they sit at the back of your throat like a vise regardless. There's a weight in your belly that you do not think you can get rid of now, in my dreams I take care of babies and puppies but fall down steep cliffs, the symbolism hits you over the head, she writes from across the Atlantic to say she is bed ridden and can't remember how to breathe.
We are on our last legs, March. We are doing what we can, but we are at the end of our carefully tied strings, please. Give us one foothold at the edge of this cliff, please, give us one solid push onto dry land.
The heart breaks and breaks
and breaks and breaks and
one day surely
you'll come out alive.
