Truth.

I’m sitting here, 236 miles east
of where I was this morning, thinking
about you and the overwhelming desire
I had to do something,
anything.

I read your email, twice,
and watched a beetle scurry across the floor.
I felt like a flood.
Everything I could possibly think to say
rushed from mind to hand
as my fingers typed furiously.

As the waters settled and I pressed send,
I could only think to drive,
to move, to go, to do something
that took me away from everything.

It’s a romanticised idea,
to pack a bag in five minutes,
leave a note on the table,
and walk out the door.

The need to rush
left me winded
and a bit dehydrated,
two hours later.

I blasted CDs from the stereo,
one after the other,
voice cracking as I screamed above the wind.

The drive gave me clarity.
It helped me think of you,
of us, of what I want,
and what you can give.

Our connection,
however fleeting and intense and scary
it has felt these last few weeks,
is all I can think about.

I don’t want to lose my confidant,
whom I see more clearly
than the stars on a cloudless night —
this person who cares for me in their way,
as I care for them in mine.

I know we are in different places,
but isn’t everyone?
We are all pages in some great journal,
notes taped or glued or written in the margins
of someone’s book.

Sometimes, we share a page,
a smudge of penciled-in remarks,
a whole chapter.

The difference, to me,
is the intention,
the coming back,
chapter after chapter in some form.

It’s why we have novels,
create anthologies,
share spoken word that goes beyond
what is scribed.

I’m not writing this poem to say
this is only a typo
in what will one day be our chapter.

I’m writing this poem because it is all I know.
These words commanded my attention,
and so I gave them a page to exist on.

I don’t know where we will go from here,
but with you, I’m not worried.

Dips

The Earth rotates at a speed of 1,037 miles per hour;
our sprinting is like marching through an ocean of molasses
for a world never ceasing in movement.

Our changes feel sudden
when so comfortable floating in stagnant waves
and pulling on worn-out boots.

But our changes happen so fast
in context with Earth’s orbit around the sun.

The hour we spent dancing under the full moon —
tee shirt-clad and glowing —
was merely a blink of an eye to Earth’s revolution.

Our neurons, like Earth,
move quickly,
making sense of each situation
before we have a chance to consider what is happening.

I wonder if that’s where my dips come from,
not the dips in my hips
with their violin shape,
but the mental dips.

When the darkness consumes like a black hole,
inhibiting the warmth, the joy;
taking away the shimmering;
and leaving a blank landscape.

Maybe my brain knows more
than it lets on,
gathering information
as fast as the Earth spins on its axis.