Printing on
Water
Chapter one: condensation
I felt you before I saw you. I didn't know what I was
expecting, but I
sensed you gathering around me like some people feel the rain in their
bones. I didn't see you walk up to me, you were just there. It was the
first time I thought of you as fog.
The first time we kissed, I pressed into you and worried
that I might lose
my balance, so I leaned a hip against a nearby mailbox for support. I was
worried that you wouldn't like the taste of my lipstick. You tasted like
my own tongue.
We moved from bar to bar that night. You told me stories
because you
wanted me to know everything. I was shy and laughing too loud. Do you
remember? But, we were coming together like clouds already. When I set
down my glass, my hand was outlined there in fog. Then it was
gone.
Chapter two: precipitation
When rain falls, nothing stays dry. Even the cozy indoor
places behind
locked doors get damp. Water seeps into everything. It covers the cars.
It makes puddles. It feeds rivers. Rain gets its way, in whatever form it
chooses to take. You can't stop it. You can only pray for it when it's not
there.
I have a fear of falling. When I dream about it, I move
like raindrops
through the sky. It's always cold and the clouds sting where they touch my
skin. After a while, I get bored with screaming and flapping my arms
against it to see that falling is almost pleasant. Maybe it's the landing
I fear.
I like sidewalks after a rain. I love the smell of clean
wet concrete and
the way it bubbles and hisses as the sun comes out. I like to think about
you when you were smaller, your knees and elbows wet, your ear to the
sidewalk to figure out how the sound happens. I love your ears.
Chapter three: evaporation
When I think about you, I am reminded of the way steam
rises and escapes
and the way it licks up the sides of coffee cups and leaves behind little
droplets of itself. I sometimes think I am covered in these droplets of
you.
I am unsettled by the temporary nature of things. I told
you once that I
love chaos, but that is not exactly true. I have a deep fondness for order
and systems and cycles. And yet, I don't see how they apply to me.
One thing is certain; water is a constant. We are nothing without it.
Being in love with you is like writing my name on a
fogged mirror. I enjoy
the impressions I have made there, and I try not to think about forever. I
will write my name fresh on you every day. I promise.
Chapter four: erosion
The lack of you licks away little pebbles of me; my arms
feel skinnier, my
heart feels thinner. Everything that was once so firmly rooted to me
floats away, all those words drawn on you swept off in the dirty and
relentless trickle. It only takes a little bit and then the damage is
done.
Teaching myself to fall out of love with you is like
unlearning my own
name. The trick of the task is to properly judge how much of yourself you
have to lose and how far you can be whittled down until you are nothing
enough to start again. I was not enough already.
The spaces between my ribs already gape with the vacancy
you left. They
hinge neglectedly on the line of my backbone. I'm waiting for the stream
to pull them away. |