a brief meditation on breath
i have diver’s lungs from holding my breath for so long. i promise you i am not trying to break a record sometimes i just forget to exhale. my shoulders held tightly near my neck, i am a ball of tense living, a tumbleweed with steel-toed boots. i can’t remember the last time i felt light as dandelion. i can’t remember the last time i took the sweetness in & my diaphragm expanded into song. they tell me breathing is everything, meaning if i breathe right i can live to be ancient. i’ll grow a soft furry tail or be telekinetic something powerful enough to heal the world. i swear i thought the last time i’d think of death with breath was that balmy day in july when the cops became a raging fire & sucked the breath out of Garner; but yesterday i walked 38 blocks to my father’s house with a mask over my nose & mouth, the sweat dripping off my chin only to get caught in fabric & pool up like rain. & i inhaled small spurts of me, little particles of my dna. i took into body my own self & thought i’d die from so much exposure to my own bereavement—they’re saying this virus takes your breath away, not like a mother’s love or like a good kiss from your lover’s soft mouth but like the police it can kill you fast or slow; dealer’s choice. a pallbearer carrying your body without a casket. they say it’s so contagious it could be quite breathtaking. so persistent it might as well be breathing down your neck—
Yesenia Montilla
















