Tuesday, March 30, 2010

"When I Think" by Jeanne Marie Beaumont

about how naive I was though never

admitting it, how badly I chose early on


pending my affections carelessly as

spare change then making quick getaways

igniting the bridges—or when I think of the time

wasted brooding and stewing, my heart a sort of

crock-pot simmering bitterness, it’s good to be

grown-up at last with boxes of journals I’m unlikely

to get back to and albums of photos as a very

selective mnemonic aid as though most of life

had been a string of holidays, reunions, bright

birthday parties when of course it’s dreary Mondays,

Friday nights watching old black-and-white movies,

hands ink stained from the newspaper, waits

at the post office, subways, trips to the drugstore,

thousands of bowls of cereal, pots of soup—And

when I think of all those I went to school with,

worked alongside, ate with, taught, those I will not

ever see again due to the odd cruel way time

shakes us and scatters us and never recombines

us even perhaps someone I was married to, even

him, and those I failed or let down or otherwise

proved myself a disappointment to, and those I will

never share the same time and place with, we will never

coincide, and that’s a shame but also reassuring

because how much are we capable of accumulating,

of absorbing I wonder, for already I try to grasp

one thing only to feel another slip away to make room,

a musical chairs of the mind and who keeps taking

a chair away—so that when I think of the finite

it seems the most profound fact, the boundaries

of minutes, years, borders of gardens and countries,

frame of the painting, edge of the screen, that one

chair left though it has the softest fabric, high back,

cushions to nod right off in until the music stops.

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