with language from Angela Pelster, Charles Simic, David Sedaris,
Miranda July, Annie Proulx, and Kathryn Nuernberger
You don’t need to fight discomfort. How else
could a person come up with this stuff?
A light that shines between the brake lights
that you can turn on
to indicate that you have no destination,
the inertia
of grief, the sound of heaving, the aubergine
nightmare. After this, we can never speak of it again
—all my hunger. But listen
I remember an afternoon fresh
out of college. I pressed my cheek against the pavement
in prayer. Sunshine stood in the doorway
in droopy pajamas and said “It’s ruthless out here,
I know.” I did my best to ignore the sharp glint of her,
underlining the good bits in melted butter
as the blade dropped down on them.
I refilled my ice cube trays and realized
life as I knew it was officially over.
It is actually hard to write something framed
by a border of crab claws.
I’d describe myself as looking
a bit like the scar from an infected wound.
I still see the pale line of myself in each mirror,
a fish gone belly up.
(But who is she? I’ve never noticed
her before. What do I fear
I will find, shaking
the laboratories of the mind?)
I remember I’d practiced
getting dirty.
I was so used to being alone,
to deciding the how and when of everything,
how many times
my thighs disintegrated into waves of contractions.
(She breathed in, she breathed out
and when she wouldn’t oblige
it was a game.) But what I mean
is a sharp map of the memory
of a year following
a year following a year—
a selective story of what happened
and sometimes of what it meant.
If you’re tempted,
put a camera in front of your eye.
I tried it, to reach down inside
towards the real,
the slow
pound of the sea.
When you jump in—
And you have to jump in—
the cold stops your heart
for a second—see—
and then it comes back in a seizure
of beating
that makes your vision blur.
(I don’t think it does hers.)
In there, I’m laughing with my head on the table.
(She has watched me spend my time—
a great labor, the growing
of blisters and rashes.
But now I am back.)
I’m tired of going
somewhere, I want to be there.
One day, a photographer—
if I happened to look that way—
began to change this in subtle ways.
You will see it
in ten years or so. The developer is slow
to produce an image.
From out there, I will have miscarried
the truth
(inosculation)
of light and shadow.
Here, let me show you.
No, it’ll be ok, just place your eye here,
look through.
Can you believe it?
I do one thing
and also
its exact opposite.
SAM LIMING’s poems have been published in Palette Poetry, Hawaii Pacific Review, Leavings, and The Spotlong Review. She has an MFA from the University of South Carolina, where she served as editor for Cola Literary Review. She currently reads for The Adroit Journal.
The art that appears alongside this piece is “l’amicizia” by GRETA KOSHENINA.