The Journal Petra 02

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Laura Goldstein




grid

healing parallel #1:   birds and snow
we make a little nest of flakes that
becomes  the  next  life    and then
a wave of air.   i might have mixed up
a   memory   with   a   strong   feeling
in the present- i merely chose to remind
myself.   i don't      become attached
               in need of rest
   also in need of energy.   a certain
kind of rest   and   a certain kind
of energy.   what are the other words?
you can spread them out on a grid
whose vertices light up momentarily
with meaning.   i can't remember
the rest- i have to be reminded or become
addicted to the naturally tactile. every day
and   night   every   day   and   night


the  grid  of  night  as  parallel  to  that
of day           each bird a black spot on
  the page works to further its meaning
by just being.    stop thinking,  my
teacher said.    so i saw a reflection
of  last  night  in  the  snow  but  didn't
realize   until   the   day   was   finished
a shape  that landed  in my hair  and
stayed,   since it was cold enough.    an
imprint made with air.    our bodies
against a common surface we observe
with pleasure.    is reflected light more
    healing  because  we  appreciate
the abstraction or is it the eye's more
tactile involvement?      what do you
mean by participation,   he asked
i don't know,   i said,   it could be
      the opposite of addiction.


i keep observing myself         nothing happens
but that's not true.     in explanation to a friend
on the phone it all sounds good              this is
common     i observe it.         yesterday a long
walk along a spiral of snow             a low sun
followed.     i kept turning to see where it was
because it was allowing me to see. what rules.
i'm watching what's warm to see what changes
    the   high   contrast   against   the   cold
snow in stasis,   no birds,   no sun,   but day
is what i'm describing now. at night i looked out
at what was there,   trees       exploded grids
of branches     artificial orange light right outside
there is no parallel   to the present   that adds up
to addiction,   only the tactile reality of time.


what numbers tell us,   i said to them is that
sometimes  we  have  to  look  harder  for
patterns.    how slow a great change actually
takes,   he responded.    would you like to try
this experiment?       i asked them. it's almost
    the end of the day.    they didn't respond
according to the book i'm reading about
language,   that means they perceive me
as dangerous.    as soon as it's night i think
“i need to rest”.   don't spend too much time
thinking,   i told them.   i've heard that before
is this the right way to be teaching? i am this
small space.      we're all silent
between night and day,                   all
on a grid.    as if i really miss you,   but that
can't be true.    but as someone entirely new
i can say that when  you  gave  me  these  words
i was happy and i'm happier now that i've used them.


the days are actually changing me.    i wonder
at this pattern.    i thought about it as she was
touching me,   rubbing the blood out of my lungs
on the phone         i told her about how words
when in a certain pattern           touch me
in a certain way.    she said yeah.    as the night
comes on the snow turns black.    you don't know
me you don't know me at all   i  say  to  myself
            as a person i am a grid of myself
any pattern i create is to show you that grid
it exists because of time.    can you tell that i am going
      away soon can you tell that i care
i'm  trying  to  remember  the   words
as if they were parallel to my thinking
new plan:       winter weather is an ether
of remembered pleasures.      lungs rough
up into a grid of addiction,   parallel to
an earlier era.     that's not true     i then
tell myself.     when the birds disappear
under the snow at night i wait for the day
and its perpetual light.    this is not
healing.    dependent on memories    months
before. she walked in the door          offered
me       a small cookie    dipped in dark
chocolate from a small paper bag      started
singing.   when the heat switches off i can still
hear her behind the closed door of her room
change happens under the snow this is something
we know and think about all the way up to
            and     through     the spring


healing parallel #2:    an era of addiction
the snow,  even   somehow   an  addition
at night            my  teacher  gave  me
             an  image       then we all moved
with palpable possibility        birds probably
feel that way       along with the unmarked fear
winter's warmth          is an end    when i can't think
of anything      marked out onto a grid that i use
as a representation of myself              it's not
that i'm tired   it's something else       it's deep
appreciation of the tactile that requires attention
from a direction i'm accustomed to drawing upon
as addiction     now that space           is ready
            to be filled with light


there's no addiction to silence a parallel to a guess
a guess i ordered an extra word saw the whole day
and the next day as a grid of light and invisibility
where are you i asked everyone I had just finished
reading and it felt tactile my lungs responded what
happens at night a dirt bird didn't make it under a
pile of short phrases I commented on like “elaborate”
melting snow is still snow “it's slippery” i said
as i slipped you know that story about looking back
because it's impossible calm down some healing
can happen in cloud's pink shadow desired effect
of a list static and still every word that stays
the waves are clear today,  rolling the light
in large parallels.    there is no pattern
a bird is a grid    that has flown.    no other
addictions have grown            it's healing
singing is sometimes better for language
they told me    so why can't we    sing
all the time?        the snow in little circles
on each wave the lungs wake up a bit
look back to the page where the list is
it's tactile.        this is not the night
            to wonder
how i'll feel on other nights.     it's true



Laura Goldstein's first collection of poetry, loaded arc, was released by Trembling Pillow Press in 2013 and her second collection, awesome camera, was published by Make Now Press in 2014. She has also published six chapbooks as well as numerous poems and essays in magazines in print and online. She currently teaches at Loyola University and co-curates the Red Rover Reading Series.