practicing life

Our chemical hearts.
Yours. Mine.
Theirs.

Organs thumping
again and again,
unabashed.

I wrote a story recently,
one about a man
who saved a woman by CPR.

He pressed
and pressed and pressed
and pressed.

She faded in
and out. Her pulse unsure
about this world and
tempted by the next.

He pressed
and pressed and pressed,
again.

She lived
and lived and lived
and lived.

I can feel my own heart now,
steady, unchanging.
2022 tested the limits of it,
as 2021 did before,
and all those formidable years before.

I lived in limbo,
fading in and out
as the world spun
all too quickly.

I lived and lived
and lived.

Looking back,
I’m not entirely sure how,
but boy am I glad I did.

If the act of writing was violent,
I wrote until I nearly bled out,
stumbling with my head
stuck in the clouds.

I hid in a trench so deep
no one could dig me out.

I laughed and cried,
neither emotion coordinating
with their usual expression.

I was we, for a short period.
A whirlwind.

I finished the longest
and shortest period of my life.

I broke.
Then was sutured.

I drove and drove
and drove,
finding serenity within the trees
and nearly passing out
in the Oklahoma sun.

I made use of my brain to hand
connections,
writing for more than myself.

I’m not sure what to expect
for next year.

My guards are up,
like the gutter bumpers
in bowling.

I want for so much,
but most of all,
I wish for a kinder sea
for me and you.

One year

I wrote a poem on this day
last year — grateful
for someone and something
that sparked a light for me.

I chased that light,
feet and heart pounding
as I stumbled along.

When I finally found her,
she snuggled into my chest,
cradled by curved bone
and soft organs.

On this day last year,
I did not know of
all that could (and would)
happen.

I graduated college holding a pink rose;
a black sling was my greatest accessory;
my heart saw potential in vulnerability; and
I moved to a new home with friendly shadows.

I’m eager to see what happens next,
knowing that the impossible
has already occurred.

October, again

What is it like,
to believe?

Is it sweet, like
juice from a fresh apricot
running down your chin?

Is it chilling, like
a drive late at night
with all the windows down?

Can you tell me,
please?

I’ve been thinking
about my life, as I tend to do
when October rolls around.

The holes that once perforated
my body are not as numerous
as they once were.

It doesn’t sting as bad, either.

Yet, never did I imagine this day,
nor the ones of last year,
or two years before that,
or two years before that.

I’m not sure what to do
with these thoughts —
existing like ghosts of past selves.

They litter my dreams
and the quiet shelves
of my heart.

How much do you believe?

Is it measurable by the
length of my arms
surrounding you?

Is it quantified by the
number of leaves
covering your backyard?

Can you count them
and let me know?

My heart beats slowly,
as if contesting each breath
entering my lungs.

Yet, I carry on,
hoping to learn more
about what’s kept me here.

Maybe it’s some form of a
beautiful reciprocal arrangement —
if you catch my reference.