Sun in Days

Home > Other > Sun in Days > Page 2
Sun in Days Page 2

by Meghan O'Rourke


  I thought my body

  would work forever,

  like a rocking horse,

  a Ferris wheel, or grass

  returning. Now I carry myself

  as a coffin, the sharp corner

  digging into my collarbone,

  hands sweating

  and burning, neck spasming,

  a blister at the life line.

  I’ll never get it to the car.

  The Night Where You No Longer Live

  Was it like lifting a veil

  And was the grass treacherous, the green grass

  Did you think of your own mother

  Was it like a virus

  Did the software flicker

  And was this the beginning

  Was it like that

  Was there gas station food

  and was it a long trip

  And is there sun there

  or drones

  or punishment

  or growth

  Was it a blackout

  And did you still create me

  And what was I like on the first day of my life

  Were we two from the start

  And was our time an entrance

  or an ending

  Did we stand in the heated room

  Did we look at the painting

  Did the snow appear cold

  Were our feet red with it, with the wet snow

  And then what were our names

  Did you love me or did I misunderstand

  Is it terrible

  Do you intend to come back

  Do you hear the world’s keening

  Will you stay the night

  Ever

  Never, never, never, never, never.

  —KING LEAR

  Even now I can’t grasp “nothing” or “never.”

  They’re unholdable, unglobable, no map to nothing.

  Never? Never ever again to see you?

  An error, I aver. You’re never nothing,

  because nothing’s not a thing.

  I know death is absolute, forever,

  the guillotine-gutting loss to which we never say goodbye.

  But even as I think “forever” it goes “ever”

  and “ever” and “ever.” Ever after.

  I’m a thing that keeps on thinking. So I never see you

  is not a thing or think my mouth can ever. Aver:

  You’re not “nothing.” But neither are you something.

  Will I ever really get never?

  You’re gone. Nothing, never—ever.

  Mistaken Self-Portrait as Persephone in the Desert

  One hot afternoon, I toured the old prison for POWs.

  There are no people here, only facilities for holding them.

  One doesn’t think of the Underworld as being bright,

  but I lived in the desert, under that big sky, as if I were belowground.

  I watched a film of a Beckett play. I love order, Clov says at one point. It’s my dream.

  A world where all would be silent and still, and each thing in its last place, under the last dust.

  In the desert there is order. All the prisoners were silent and still and in their places.

  And then you know what. The blisterfire bombs, shudder-thuds, floodlights, dazed

  cracks, canines.

  Of course, this chaos is their minds.

  In reality they lie on cots the long, hot afternoons, and paint murals

  of the land they see from their windows. It’s this detail I find so—

  imagine being in prison and drawing what lies just outside: humps of nothing, dun-yellow needles, flat vulture sky.

  We must accept who we are.

  Proust said, The real voyage of discovery consists not in seeking new landscapes, but

  in having new eyes.

  When I dream, I dream that my mother was never frightened for me.

  In the painting at the house I stay in there is a film being shown, a celluloid film.

  A child asks for more. Then she’s leaving the orphanage,

  a suitcase in her tiny hand, a box of food, a waiting train.

  She is rubbing her eyes, trying to see, and my mother

  is rubbing her back, warm hand on bone.

  They’re not thinking of the land they left behind, of all they’ve lost.

  So I’m painting the desert before us. Look:

  the dry scrubthe yellows and blues

  the sharp eyes of cactus needles

  Expecting

  I’m six months along

  and I wonder why nobody

  told me. I’ve got red wine

  in my right hand, a cigarette

  in my left. There’s

  a noisy party all

  around me. I put down

  the glass and lift my shirt.

  The baby’s there, visible

  under my transparent

  skin, a little girl, wearing

  bluebird barrettes.

  I think she’s mad at me.

  What a lush!

  she’s thinking.

  Her hair is gold,

  too short for barrettes,

  so I wonder if they’re

  actually part of her skull. She’s

  got blue veins all under

  her skin. My stomach

  wobbles like Jell-O.

  It’s time for her to be

  born, another guest at the party

  says, and my dead mother

  helps me lift the pregnant belly off,

  unscrewing it like a cork.

  Little girl, I’m sorry

  I took no prenatal

  vitamins, I ate the sushi,

  which was delicious,

  and today the newspaper

  led with a story

  about impoverished zoos

  deciding which species

  they’ll no longer

  protect and breed. But there’s

  room for you. I just

  didn’t know what to think,

  I just didn’t know how to think of you.

  Miscarriage

  your romantic, imprecise side:

  the time you glimpseda hawk on the road

  and thought it was your mother—

  a conception

  misled by want

  Mistaken Self-Portrait as Mother of an Unmade Daughter

  Do you not want to be alive?

  I can’t say I don’t understand—

  To bring something into the world,

  a creature that will be ruled by the conflict between its “will”

  and its impulses, surroundings, limitations. . . .

  We choose many things, but we can’t say we choose existence.

  My existence is not mine

  the way my opinions are, my blue crepe pants,

  my taste for cherries.

  My existence belongs in some sense to my parents, and to

  the universe—or God, if you believe in god.

  It belongs to evolution,

  the galaxy and the space beyond,

  to black holes, to red dwarfs, to

  hydrogen and oxygen and carbon.

  My existence belongs to iron.

  I understand, in a way, my body’s

  reluctance

  to impose existence on another—

  and yet I—I almost feel you are real

  and I know you, turning over the beach shell in my hands,

  remembering the red sailboat shirt you wore all this summer,

  with a button for the yellow sun—

  •

  With my small phone always tucked about my person

  under the great lavender sky I’ll set forth

  on a pilgrimage

  to the bridge that wayaccept

  the noble truth

  which is to be absorbed

  in the enormity of it without fail

  even if the precipice

  keeps leaving you voicemails—

  •<
br />
  Perhaps you don’t come

  because it’s more painful

  to me to have you

  than not to?

  : the person who first put a boat

  in a bottle

  and later wondered

  why she’d had the impulse

  to contain—

  •

  Before you have sight

  the colors sway underneath your eyes

  like kelp.

  It is false to speak like this, but

  false not to speak of you—

  all the language I have for you

  is ornamental—

  but the sun is no ornament

  go out and see it

  stand under it rushing onward

  let the body go borderless and drained

  a scrim

  for the light to come through.

  At Père Lachaise

  It wasn’t always going to be like this.

  You were going to read books and grow up

  and understand more. You weren’t going

  to bury people, you were going to study

  Proust’s gray-black grave at Père Lachaise

  and read the note the French girl left there.

  Who was she with her bobbed hair, her violin case?

  One day you would die but it was so far away

  time itself would be different by then—

  only time is not different as the years go by

  just faster and it gets harder not easier to die.

  So you practice: climb the blue and unremembered hills,

  catch your breath on the bridge

  between the cliffs, trumpet flowers

  blooming like the robber barons’ wild hair.

  Your first bike was blue with ribbons,

  you called her BlueBell.

  Along Pierrepont Street you sped

  wondering who Pierre was and where

  his bridge had been: were you now

  riding over it unable to see the chasm

  of violet rocks below your pedaling feet—?

  Proust you are dead but I am reading

  your white bones your black words.

  I laugh aloud in the French interior designer’s

  soft white bed eating a pistache macaron.

  When we die gloved in earth we’ll wonder why

  we ever felt aswim in shame the lawns of June

  were ablaze the lawns ablaze

  Interlude (Posthumous)

  When I’m dead

  my daughters

  will shuffle their impossible bodies

  along the tombstone’s soft grass,

  and on the damp stone

  lay their cheeks, saying

  Mother, why did you not

  value us?

  II

  What It Was Like

  Your green mind is an ocean you can’t enter,

  sleeping in the bed hours each day.

  Blurry figures move in the rooms around you.

  Someone cooks a Christmas feast. Another buys

  complicated, precise plastic goods,

  distributes them around the house.

  The past opens into a lamp, a bee colony,

  a book about mitochondria under attack.

  You want to be alone in the deep,

  the spiky sea urchins drifting along the floor,

  the fish starting and shivering, the reef fading.

  Instead you’re like the dead in deadpan.

  In the subway the billboards ask

  DID I REALLY DIE? The snow on the sidewalk

  graying. The buckets of footsteps gone.

  You keep saying, this is my hand,

  it hurts, please take it away.

  Hating and wanting in equal measure,

  jealous of the others’ human time,

  the way their bodies work:

  cells dividing, cytokines quiet.

  Not yours. You stare at the ceiling,

  eating superfoods, taking pills, rubbing

  your liver with castor oil,

  spooning down maca and nettles.

  Notebook pages scrawled with the facts:

  the what-went-wrong-and-how, the police

  searchlight squall of pursuit, the verdict

  always about to be delivered.

  Idiopathic Illness

  I threw hollowed self at your robust,

  went for IV drips, mercury detoxes, cilantro smoothies.

  I pressed my lips to you, fed you kale, spooned down coconut oil.

  I fasted for blood sugar, underboomed the carbs,

  chased ketosis, urine-stripped and slip-checked.

  Baked raw cocoa & mint & masticated pig thyroids.

  You were contemporary, toxic, I can’t remember what you were,

  you’re in my brain, inflaming it, using up the glutathione.

  I read about you on the Internet & my doctor agreed.

  Just take more he urged & more.

  You slipped into each cell. I went after you with a sinking inside

  and medical mushrooms for maximum oom, I plumbed

  you without getting to nevermore. O doom.

  You were a disease without name, I was a body gone flame,

  together, we twitched, and the acupuncturist said, it looks difficult,

  stay calmish. What can be said? I came w/o a warranty.

  Stripped of me—or me-ish-ness—

  I was a will in a subpar body.

  I waxed toward all that waned inside.

  Human-Sized Pain

  It was a me I couldn’t let go,

  in Sauconys and sweat-wicking shirts,

  in mules and a miniskirt, in fear, in numbness,

  virusy, wired and dumb, and all of a sudden

  praying. I shuddered a little like

  one does in a dream. The pain

  arrived as if from inside me,

  reaching out of my marrow into my mind.

  I tried to act, to alleviate, to assuage.

  But it didn’t get better

  with time; time made it worse.

  To know my pain you had

  to want what I wanted but not have it,

  you had to watch the years unfurl

  into yellow leaves without leaving.

  No, forget the leaves—too poetic.

  To know it you had to live without,

  while those around you lightly had

  and had and kept on having.

  I believed less and less

  in the future. All that possibility,

  dwindled to a nothing, but.

  Four, five, six, the months,

  four, five, six, the years.

  It was an image in a photograph

  that kept getting blurrier

  even as the resolution grew clearer.

  It’s not like missing the dead

  or wanting another chance at love;

  it shimmers on lakes,

  is especially strong in the summer,

  clinging to me like a person

  who can’t swim but wants

  to be in the water, a thing

  that will drown me

  just to show me who I am.

  Poem (Problem)

  I kept trying to put the pain into a poem,

  but all I did was write the word “pain”

  in my notebook, over and over.

  A Note on Process

  1.

  I began by keeping track of my time. It was February and the snow had been falling all morning. I rarely saw any people on the sidewalk outside, though I could detect the traces of their passage, which the fresh snow quickly covered. I was reading a book about a gymnast whose body seemed to contain an important mystery. I read a little and then I watched archival footage on YouTube, so I could see it “for myself.” I surrounded myself with this moment.

  2.

  Watching the gymnast land a dismount from the uneven bars gave me a sense of infinite possibility, as if the routine
were a process occurring over and over and over. I was a girl wanting to be a gymnast, studying her photographs—her gravity-defying body—in the small hot gym where I practiced. And I was thirty-seven with a body that didn’t work.

  3.

  The routine of my days was itself without shape or end, although I understood there would be an ultimate end.

  4.

  When I finished her biography I made a list of what I had “done” all day. This was a failure, as it should have taken as much time to write as living itself did. But failing was fine with me. I wanted to formulate myself around a list written in precise ink, not merely to fall asleep on the couch again, to slip under.

  5.

  I went to the kitchen to take a drug the doctors had given me, a little imploring thing.

  6.

  What did I know about glory at that age? the gymnast wrote in her memoir. To me, competing was about improving my body and mind—overcoming frustrations, anger, and jealousy so that, in one shining moment, my body became a tool driven by unwavering concentration and desire.

  7.

  The clip of the gymnast doing her perfect routine never lost its patina for me. In it I could see the will honed to a fine tool, a ferocious act of attention. This was a process I couldn’t imagine not being part of—

  Even as I had begun to reconcile myself to exactly that.

  Caged in a body that would not let me escape it—;

 

‹ Prev