Grief
is a stomach expanding
when there’s no food left in the house.
You scrub dishes until there is nothing left to clean,
until there is no more nail to chew down,
until you are sitting inside a whale’s mouth surrounded by the sound of water.
You contemplate the filling and refilling of the chest,
how the hand that feeds can just as easily let you go hungry,
if the child remembered to wish before he blew out the candle.
You wave your hand like an open window,
see snow in the middle of spring,
consume every almond the shade of her skin
as if there is meaning to be found.
We found her hair
clogging the drain on a Thursday night.
On Friday, we kept our eyes open in the shower
and pulled away fist fulls of black string from our scalps,
not recognizing any of it as our own.
Next Thursday you woke up in the house you grew up in.
Your mother asked you if it was suicide.
Your sister hugged you like she always does.
You left the bed unmade like you always do. Â
After the phone call,
you ate cookies with your best friends and cried into tea cups.
When there was no more water left in your body,
you went home and nursed your swollen eyes.
And when you felt yourself being dragged through the streets,
you smashed your fingers into the pavement
only to watch them turn to chalk,
only to cough out apologies like a line of ants,
following you home,
swarming around your prayers,
reminding you there is no rest to be found.
And when everything has shattered,
you will wish for lightning to split the truth,
you will wish the sky to peel back like tide and pull you in.
Maybe then you’ll find yourself in a room filled with answers.
Yesterday,
my mother asked me again if I ever found out what really happened.
For the first time I realized I’m okay with not knowing.
I do not know each name of loss,
how to forgive the men who kiss without permission,
how to heal with so many sharp things in sight.
But a splinter growing into our heels, will find a home in our steps,
in the way we begin to notice the slip of space between fabric and skin,
in how we find ourselves looking less into mirrors
and more into the faces of ones we love. Â