What keeps me away from you, this page, this tired wrist? She said ” I hadn’t realized it, but I’d been writing this whole time.” I speak to myself in unrealized poetry, the slang of the universe. How it becomes so elusive when I put it to paper. Am I now finally parenting myself, kissing the forehead of my inner child, telling him being different is a superpower? No need to speak to fill the immeasurable void with sound and language. I’ve never known another world other than that which surrenders to my wandering eyes, melting and hardening at the whims of the wind and dirt. I’ve grown, evolved through the random mutations of my ever-curious disposition. How I always wished to arrive, though now I realize I’ll always be in a state of arrival and departure, always mourning my past self and celebrating the him I’m stepping into. I’ve been centering myself all this time, only now realizing the self is an infinitely expanding universe with no center. I create to share. To share fleeting moments with the afternoon sun draping my skin with heat and sweat, the sound of a vacuum cleaner droning on from across the fence, “papa! papa!”, a reminder that childhood means awakening. To share what churns like celestial stew in my gut with my conscience mind, the outer crust formed by bubbling magma, never truly knowing the intensity of burning from within. To share with others sometimes too (I like to watch their eyes, the shape of their mouths). We all share this place, this floating ball of dirt. The anthill out front forming in cracks of pavement just as significant and wondrous as our great pyramids of Egypt. That’s what I mean when I say we share this place. That there’s no qualitative distinction between the bird’s nest resting in the home’s decaying soffit and the bustling city, a symbol of man’s urge to be close, to forget the night, it’s constellations, it’s own desire to guide us through this terrain. We’ve created a caste system, given things. names and values and places in the chaotic library of our thoughts. I have an insatiable urge to organize it all, to thumb through it’s pages, move the book from one shelf to another, then back again. I feel the need to fix all broken things (even though I know the world can only sustain itself through breaking and reforming on top rubble and debris). My happiest, my most at peace, is when I give up on making sense of the senseless. It’s scary to surrender that sense of control, but that’s all it is… a sense. And senses can grow and change over time like mangrove jungles reaching and twisting toward the sun around jagged rock and coral, building roots that don’t need to be grounded to be secure. Fear paints the interior of my house red and locks the door. It’s an old sense, just as important as love and togetherness, but we shun it away for how it challenges any sense of security and certainty we thought we had. But when a giant wave sinks a ship, do we blame the wind, the ocean, the ship itself? Maybe. But more importantly we mourn the losses and acknowledge the sheer power and mystery of the earth. So when fear capsizes us we shouldn’t punish the fear, nor should we punish ourselves for letting it in. We should respect its strength, its ancient purpose, and marvel at its passing. Fear will inevitably crash onto our shore again, onto the sand that is only the sand because it has known the waves so intimately, crumbling for eternity so that it can accept the wave like the child accepts the mother tucking him in at night, a gentle forehead kiss, a promise that everything will still be there when he awakes. So here I am, kissing my inner child, assuring him he won’t drown, giving him permission to dream.










