the ends unwoven in
A poignant reflection on life's inherent incompleteness, the quiet acceptance of threads…
Read more →A lover sweeps grave dirt, serving black coffee to a spectral presence.
These days, I only date the dead.
The thing about dead people is that they’re
—not resigned, exactly; perhaps
accepting. There’s something
about having already slid off this
mortal coil that makes it easier;
having suffered the ultimate
disappointment, nothing I do
can really ruin them so badly.
It takes the pressure off. No rush
when the worst has already happened.
The veil, crossed, mutes things—
maybe that’s what makes my faint,
gray-mist kind of love fit better
on the already six-feet-under.
Skin, breath, heartbeat; whatever
physical presence I have,
in our bed, you say that’s enough.
When you leave, I sweep up grave dirt;
before that, I make breakfast:
me, two poached eggs and milky coffee;
you, the blackest coffee I can brew,
so dark and pungent you can just about
smell it. You inhale the steam and say
you love me. Whatever warmth you feel,
beyond everything, is enough
to say it back.