Saturday, December 22, 2012


This woman who sits on airplanes,
Who eats too much chocolate,
Is loved in a generic way,
By a mother 
And a father 
Who haven't seen her
In seventeen months,
The cells in her body have mostly
Been replaced by new ones
Which look like the old ones 
But must be worse
In almost imperceptible
But substantial ways
Because she 
Like you 
And everything else
Except some special jellyfish
Has an expiration date,
And her day of utmost beauty
And health 
Caught her unawares. 
She was busy translating 
Ovid in a cold building with
Orange walls,
Under the watch
Of a failed scholar
With dry, yellow hair
Who knew little about life,
And nothing about love.
Sadness would resurface
Periodically
Like a toothache,
When she let her focus slip,
Which was rare except at night,
Since survival,
Back then,
Meant perfect grades,
And she very much wanted to live
Just in case things might get better
Eventually,
When she would surround herself
With books
And maybe people
That would both comfort
And excite her.
Once Ovid was conquered
She would slowly walk 
Through resonating hallways
Towards the white-tiled restroom
Taking a detour first,
Acutely aware of the way her scarf
Fell on her shoulders,
Wondering if this time
She would get a glimpse of someone
Through a door left open
By a teacher who enjoyed a breeze,
Her hope unreasonable,
Since even if she did,
He would not have been looking,
He would not have noticed
That her beautiful blue scarf,
Which matched her hair so perfectly,
Was meant to suggest
Horse rides in the Sahara desert,
Like in that Italian TV series from the eighties.
Sixteen years later she's on her way to Helsinki
Sitting next to a flatulent man
Who eats beef bourguignon.
She's eating bread and butter,
She's forgotten to pre-order
Her vegetarian meal.
The boys who secretly admired her
At recess
Are musicians now
Or more likely dead,
Because how can somebody go on
Eating soup
Or tuning strings
After missing that moment
When a long warm glance
Of recognition 
Could have changed everything,
Reversed the relentless
Flow from full to empty?
She would have shared her body
With them,
Laughed at herself for not doing it sooner
This mingling of minds and hopes and terrors,
A breathless, shivering clarity, 
A new resolution forming,
The promise to let herself be seen,
As ugly as she felt.
Thanks to that glance
This woman,
Twice the age of that girl,
Would be writing a different poem today,
Or nothing at all,
She would maybe know better
Than clinging to this love for men who don't get her,
Compelled to reenact it
Until the spell is broken,
Holding on to the hope
Of an alternate ending.
She is doomed to be loved
Unconditionally
Only by sweet men she gets tired of 
In a month
While the men she wants,
Playful, witty, but with an icy core that 
She keeps mistaking for genius,
Admire her at first
But get tired of her intensity,
Suspect she might be nuts,
Hope she will leave them alone at last,
To their silly Texan girlfriends who do porn star tricks
(Why on earth does she need to know this?)
And laugh hysterically to the jokes she never gets
Because she was translating Ovid in Italy
When That guy said That thing
On American TV,
Or is it a hip-hop reference?
But really,
She might just not be funny
And she will always have
An accent,
Such an easy target for their cruelty
Once it's lost its charm,
Which happens on Week Two.
She's done this to herself,
This exile west,
So that feeling out of place
Would sound perfectly normal,
Her sudden lack of words
Justified,
And again tomorrow,
As she lands in Rome,
She has a convenient excuse,
It's her new life in America
That will set her apart,
Her familiarity with 
Squirrels,
Bad Mexican food, 
Automatic transmissions,
Nights spent at bars
As a shortcut to each other's
Softness,
Stumbling through Pilsen 
To a basement full of rabbits,
Laying it all out,
Bodies quivering with lust,
Only to take everything back
In the morning
When they will walk
Through the city
Like enemies
And if only she -
If only he -
...
If only
He was struck by lightning
Or, as an alternative,
He begged for her forgiveness,
She could finally move on
And desire to kiss
The perfectly lovely guy 
With Viking cheekbones 
who will hand her
A latte
At Starbucks.




Wednesday, December 5, 2012



I ask my Canadian friend
If she thinks I’m insane.
“No.”
What can she say?
She’s my friend,
She lives so far away,
She doesn’t witness
This hair-tearing business
Over paper-writing woes
And the coldness of someone
I considered a good friend.
Send for the wailing women!
Here I am
Beating my chest
Until it’s time to eat.
I will never be thin again,
Gone are the times
When rejection meant
Loss of appetite.
I do my laundry
And look for a new man:
1/2 cup Ted Hughes
1/2 cup Egill Skallagrímsson
1 tablespoon Louis C.K.


Tuesday, December 4, 2012



I have to write a paper.
Instead
I make narrative mix tapes
(Which, I swear, is an assignment!)
Because it gives me pleasure.
I spent hours doing this,
The songs tell a story of 
Longing
And leaving
From a woman’s point of view
And from a man’s.
Horses abound.
I printed the song list on 
Bright pink
Card stock.
I thought about giving you a copy,
And I know you would love it
If you listened to it
But these days you think I’m nuts,
And what’s nuttier than a woman
Who keeps giving unwanted gifts?
“Nothing”
Is the answer.


Saturday, December 1, 2012



I should have asked
If I could keep my tooth.
My mouth had been its home
For twenty-five years.
It deserved a ceremony,
Or to become Art.
Together we survived the accident,
Fourteen years ago,
But neither of us fully recovered.
If you’re a tooth
There aren’t many ways to hide 
Your wounds.
If you happen to be me
You aren’t much better at
Acting like everything is cool.
Somebody once called it
Emotional exhibitionism
And I can get away with it
Because I’m European
We’d rather embark
On impossible quests
Than pretend
We’re okay.