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 Hibernating
 
We close the door 
and climb into our space, 
now the size of a tiny berth, 
a bunk bed's worth of time, 
where we press 
our voices, our thoughts, what we want, 
into the fabric of that being we make. 
We turn our worn sides out 
fending against the weathersome world 
that strips our time, 
carving it down to the marrow, 
driving our blood deep within our skins, 
so deep we knot ourselves like roots 
beneath down-filled blankets. 
We hibernate like oak trees, 
garnering our sap 
for a core we tend with love 
as a wind bangs at the window screens, 
and a salt air curls the edges 
of midnight green leaves, 
pennants twisting on the thin stems 
of the still-fragile jasmine 
we planted outside the door. 
 
 
Virga 
Those that matter in this world 
seem to evaporate like salt water on skin, 
the fine residue left, 
too fleet a mark. 
Slight and startling as a butterfly's pause 
atop violet iris petals, 
drooping like tear drops, 
like surrender. 
  
Breathe now. Breathe quick. 
Are your hands open flat, are your palms facing up? 
This is how you let them come, how you let them go. 
There's no way to hold what was never really yours -- 
even the earth can't always catch 
the wisps of rainstream that disappear 
between cloud and ground, 
between then and now. 
 
WRITE ME THE STARS 
These things that hang 
in your sky, gone so long now 
from minemy black 
and lonesome nightscape, 
the blank light-white disk of a moon, 
its only adornment. 
 
These mysterious points 
of brilliance, do they wink 
like thoughts, like impulse? 
Stars dead so long now, 
the heat gone out of their light, 
they are invisible to my skin. 
 
How was I to know 
I should stop, and pay attention, 
and memorize these 
bright things missing now 
from the insensate velvet 
of my unrippled night sky? 
 
How would I have known 
they would disappear one day 
from my heavens, and then reappear 
to me only in words? 
If you’re listening, write me 
the stars, write me your night sky. 
 
  
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