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I love thinking about my brain. I picture its pathways all lit up and blinking like cars on the highway at night, thick and bright in the areas where I barely have to think about something at all, the neurons firing so smoothly, the trajectory so effortless. Look how they light up when I harmonize with the radio, when a woman who reminds me of my mom looks upset, when I think about each individual person I love.

Tonight I spent almost 3 hours in four successive conversations that started with someone wanting to share something with me. One of them I hadn’t talked to in at least a couple years. This weekend, someone I have never actually hung out with pulled me aside for an hour and told me something they had not told anyone else in their lives. I think about how many stories I take in, how many other lives and thoughts and feelings I am thinking about. How brightly they light up my neural highways.

It feels like I’m flaunting these intimacies like blue ribbons, so I will say, I am not always a good friend. I am not always a good listener. I get lost in my own flurry of anxiety instead of taking in someone else’s reality, even when their reality is medicine to my worries. But I am also very aware of my gaps, the dead ends in my brain when the subject is politics, money, how machines and elements work. How small and stupid I feel, and how hopeful I am that my energy is being diverted to something else that is at least a little important. I remind myself: if you asked me about any number of people, I could tell you what and whom is most important to them, how they start a conversation when they’re upset, the walls they are constantly running into, whether they will respond better to a question or a blunt truth.

I study myself. I study feelings. I study people. It is not logical, not linear, often contradictory, hard and painful to look at. It is opening. It nurtures trust. It is important.

Quote

If you’re not losing friends then you’re not growing up.

(via sensxal-bliss)

I don’t reblog often but this is one of those crucial things that no one tells you about being a human.

Pluralism

When I tell you how I understand myself,
it confuses you.
When I say, I am a plural,
you look at me
the one you can see
and frown.
Inconsistency irritates you,
picks at the edges of your brain.
You cannot figure out
how to trust something
that changes so much.
You cannot imagine
the parts you do not see.

Look – here – each moment
that I swallow my tongue
when you ask me what I think –
myself at 9, learning to stay quiet
rather than say something
that would make the fighting worse.
The time you told me
I wasn’t giving enough
and I felt guilty for weeks –
myself at 4, the heart of my fear
of not being loved –
dragging at my self-worth for weeks.
The smallest, tenderest part of me
that cried when you called me “gentle”,
finally seen, held.
I bring so many selves with me
as we talk, touch in bed,
text from opposite sides of town.

I am afraid of your discomfort,
try for months to just be the parts
that you recognize,
try to be just one. One desire. One path.
The parts resist:
I try to stay and go at the same time.
I try to love you and shrink away.
I cannot tell who is speaking
and you say I am confused,
ask what I want,
expecting one answer.

It is quieter now,
on the other side of the panic
when I tell you I need this to end.
I look back and watch my selves separate.
The part that loves you enough to speak up
and say, I am not being good to you –
and there, finally awakening,
the part that knows
I am not being good to my selves.

13/30

I fell off the 30/30 train but here’s the last poem I wrote.

Love Poem to a Broken Mug

You bit two red moonslivers
into my hand
the thumb and pointer finger knuckles

I had been reaching into you
with the yellow sponge,
forgot your chipped edges
in wanting to fill you
with warm suds

Even now,
blood leaking lazily
into the water,
I only think
I was not gentle enough.
I was too reckless;
I did not care for you properly.

I still do not ask myself
why I kept you

I suppose I admired
your sharpness,
believed, somehow,
you could choose
how it would touch someone
else’s soft skin.
I loved your smoothness,
the parts of you I could run
my hands over
and over.
I thought you were whole
enough.

I left you on the counter,
half-rinsed,
as if someone else
would make the choice
for me.

10/30

Your heart feels the most crowded when you are alone.
After you hang up, the air is still saturated with her voice,
her sorrow hanging over you like a cloud. You cannot
stop breathing it. Intimacy is knowing exactly how someone
feels from hundreds of miles away. Agony is knowing how
someone feels because you are hundreds of miles away.
Guilt is a limbo you float in, unable to soothe a pain that
you did not cause. Repeat this to yourself. You did not cause
this. Breathe out again. Hold her lightly. If you cannot loosen
your grip, imagine your heart as a sleeping baby. Nestle
it into the crook of your arm. Be gentle, steady. Whisper
the softest words into its dreams.

9/30

I learned to write on my own,
but I learned poetry from my mother.
She will share with me a moment
most people would overlook –
three deer in the backyard
of her parents’ house –
and still insist
she does not know the difference
between my poems
and Emily Dickinson’s.

She does not know the language
but she recognizes the luminosity
of moments;
how our grandmother
was always saying, “look –
a deer in the garden!”
to whomever was in the kitchen,
her grandchildren,her three daughters.
How, as the three of them,
packing up the vacant house,
were all there to see
those three does,
staring back at them
through the kitchen window.

I used to list all the things
I felt she could not talk to me about
in words I could understand –
now, when I call,
I barely say ten words
and she asks if I am crying.
When I tell her why,
I know she is, too.
Some poets do not write.
I carry her heartbeat
like pebbles in children’s pockets.
I marvel at what she takes out
to show me.

7/30

No

No matter how gently
she places her hand
on his chest,
his skin cries
that he has been slapped.
For a while,
she did not feel
her own welts
as deeply as the wounds
she imagined beneath
his surface – fishooks
left carelessly inside him.
For a while,
she only felt safe
pulling him closer,
wondering how safe
was so painful.

No is a circle
you draw around yourself.
It is the lonely pupil
in an unblinking eye.
She is surprised
at how dark it is,
and how calm,
behind the thinnest sheen
of still air.

He looks distant,
but clearer. She wonders
if she looks different
to him, more like
someone else. A girl
in a melancholy song.
A name in past tense.

She was never safe
from what she feared the most.
No is mapping the borders
around your heart,
choosing to see
when someone
has left it.

She is waiting,
hoping he will recognize her
hand lingering in space –

not grasping for,
but welcoming,
touch.