for the 4th of July...
and somewhere
between the explosions...
you're reading my poems,
this dumb blog...
I always hope
I haunt you...
poetry, art, mistakes, music, love, visions and everything...
Cancer makes you selfish,
no matter who is
by your side
or in your support circle.
The body is a loud country.
It demands your full attention.
I used to be selfish
for all the wrong reasons.
I wanted more.
More praise.
More love.
More of the room.
Then I changed.
Or at least
I thought I had.
Now I know
pain is its own gravity.
It pulls every thought
back toward the body.
I am never more present
than when I am in pain.
The breath.
The heartbeat.
The ache beneath my ribs.
The weight of my own name.
Nothing is theoretical anymore.
Not love.
Not fear.
Not this morning's sunlight
finding its way across the floor.
Cancer did not make me
a better person.
It made me remember
that every moment of comfort
is a miracle so ordinary
we almost always forget
to call it one.
when it thunders,
do you look up at the sky,
welcoming what's coming,
or asking why?
when you fall in love,
is your heart set ablaze
for days and days?
these are the questions
that matter to me now.
not how to avoid the lightning,
but whether you'll step outside anyway.
not how to escape heartbreak,
but whether you'll hand someone
the matches.
every beautiful thing
comes with a warning label.
the ocean.
the diagnosis.
another human being.
still,
i'd rather leave this world
with smoke in my lungs
and ash on my hands
than die
having kept everything
perfectly fireproof.
the vending machine
ate my dollar.
the guy across from me
kept apologizing
to nobody.
they called my name
like they were reading
a raffle ticket.
got stabbed,
did a CT scan,
no morphine.
I walked out
with another bracelet,
another bill,
another sunrise.
hell of a way
to spend the weekend.
The river does not hurry
toward the sea.
It simply keeps
becoming itself.
The heron lifts,
the wind forgets my name,
the trees continue
their slow conversation with the sky.
If eternity exists,
perhaps it is not elsewhere.
Perhaps it is this,
the world offering itself
again and again,
without asking
to be understood.
I used to be a disaster
with a pulse.
Now I’m still here
and that feels like
a technical win
against the odds.
The city's on my TV again,
confetti caught in the summer air,
and strangers are crying
like they finally got something back.
I used to walk those streets
thinking I had forever.
Now I'm in South Florida,
watching a championship parade
and feeling homesick for versions of myself.
The players wave from buses.
Everybody looks invincible.
I know better now.
Still, when the crowd starts singing,
I sing too.
For the city.
For the years I lost.
For the years I might still get.
And for a minute,
with the noise turned up loud enough,
it feels like we're all champions
of something.
the scan says one thing.
my fear says another.
I let them fight it out
in the parking lot.
then I sharpen a little hope
against the curb
and keep it in my pocket
like a switchblade.
not because I'm certain.
because cancer expects surrender,
and I'd rather stab back.
so many pills.
so many doctors.
so many aches and pains.
so many sleepless nights.
so many fears.
so many reasons to live.