Years walked by in days
Each bringing that light
And warmth from another world
Not of the ground beneath him
Calling to him always
Of a universe that
Wanted to be knit together
Icarus lived with eyes raised
With heart lifted up
It grew in him, with him
Yearning for what wasn’t
Wouldn’t be his
For a dream of more
Than he could touch
He lived each day
In the glow of desire
Walking the path
That was given
Through valleys always
Seeking mountainside
Growing golden in the light
Of what would never be his
Until the day
His father gave him
The great feathered wings
His father who had never
Heard the universe longing
Did not know what he had made
And Icarus took
The two feathered needles
And made them his arms
Traded them for feet
That touch the ground
And reached out for his love
For his life
For the warmth that had
Always consumed him
It was never a question
To deny the universe
Longing to be knit together
He stretched to touch
The wonder that fueled his life
And as he fell
Knew the first stitch had been cast
Knew what he had always known
It would be enough
It could only be enough
Tag: dreams
Valentine’s Day Massacred
Valentine’s Day is a mess. Even if I set aside my own history with February 14th, I wouldn’t be a fan. Valentine’s Day has become performative – the day when romantic partners are supposed to pull out all the stops, and the sellers of flowers, chocolates, and anything traditionally designated as “romantic” make a killing. The only Valentine’s celebrations that don’t feel so infected are the ones kindergartners and elementary students get, if they are still anything like they were in my childhood. Chalky candy hearts printed with messages, red hots, and silly little cards from friends still make me smile.
If you’re single and would rather not be, it feels particularly cruel to have expectations of romance everywhere you go. It’s not fun, and when I lived with two other single women, we responded with a house party to watch The Godfather and eat plates of spaghetti and, of course, cannoli.
Even in a romantic relationship, I don’t think I’d want to celebrate Valentine’s Day, at least not in any of the traditional ways. I prefer my romance less scripted by capitalism and more extemporaneous and personal.
But while I’m not yearning for an expensive dinner or box of chocolates today (not that I would ever turn down chocolate!), I would love to redeem February 14 for myself.
It was on Valentine’s Day around twenty years ago that my first boyfriend (if I don’t count Blaine Disher in first grade), the first guy I ever dated, for that matter, showed up for our date and proceeded to dump me instead.
I was blindsided.
I’d been a late bloomer, and in fundamentalist Christianity to boot, so my first date didn’t happen until I was 25. We only dated a few months, but convinced by Joshua Harris and a previous marriage gone wrong on my boyfriend’s part, we “kissed dating goodbye” and were “courting.” This meant hours of processing his first marriage and a long conversation between him and my parents – and that was before our first date! Once we started actually dating, we spent hours talking about our values and kids and finances and all the things you’re supposed to talk about before considering marriage. He sent me red roses at work the day before Valentine’s Day, and when he showed up for our date and asked if we could talk, I honestly thought, “Well, I know we’ve covered all our bases, but it’s really too soon for him to propose!”
Yeah, blindsided.
Around a year later, having processed the worst of the grief, I tried to capture the moment in a poem.
Choke
(or The Saint Valentine’s Day Massacre)He said, “I can’t do this anymore.”
She wasn’t sure what he was talking about.
He said, “It’s just not there for me.”
And it started to sink in, because he wouldn’t look her in the eye.
And she said, “But what about the roses?
You sent them yesterday.”
You idiot, she thought.
“How will I explain them to everyone now?” was what she said.
“I never thought about that,” he mumbled.And she thought, then what’ve you been doing all this time?
How could it all be meaningless to you?
But she didn’t say that, because she didn’t want to hurt him
and it was hurting him to hurt her;
she wouldn’t make it worse.
That wouldn’t be loving him
and she didn’t know how to not love him yet.
So she didn’t say that.
And she didn’t cry.Except her voice got shaky
and her hands.
And her eyes for some reason started to water.
Her heart couldn’t understand
what her mind now saw very clearly:
he was leaving lightly
and he wasn’t coming back.He said, “At least we didn’t let it get all that far.”
And she wondered what life he’d been living in
to say something so stupid,
and what kind of fool he was
to believe it.
And she couldn’t feel a thing
and she couldn’t understand.He said, “Well, I think this has gone really well…
about as well as such a thing can go.
But then, I didn’t expect any less from you.”
And she supposed he meant it as a compliment
but it stung.
She wasn’t making it hard on him
because that wouldn’t be loving him
and she couldn’t stop as readily as he.And then he added, “You’ve never tried to pressure me
I always loved that about you.”
And she thought, oh, now you tell me.
But she didn’t say it.
He hugged her bye
and she didn’t shrink
and she didn’t cling.He drove away
and as she walked back in the house
she hoped he’d choke.
Am I glad we didn’t get married? Most definitely. Despite this incident, he wasn’t a bad guy, and I suspect we could’ve made a decent marriage, but though he would’ve ended up being a more interesting person, I would’ve ended up much more conventional than I am. And I like who I am and am grateful I’ve had the opportunity to be this me.
I still wish he’d handled breaking up with me a good bit differently. Valentine’s Day was an excruciating reminder for years. And while the sting is only a memory now, redeeming February 14 is something I’m still doing.
So, I throw the occasional Godfather party. I try to remember friends who the day may be difficult for with chalky candy hearts and silly cards. And I find ways to be kind to myself. (My favorite local bakery-cafe has a personal gourmet pizza special tonight I just might take advantage of.)
The murder of St. Valentine may be more apt to the celebration of the day than we tend to acknowledge. Few hearts in this world haven’t been broken, and I suspect far more than me long to redeem the day.
(Side note on the poem – I’d spent weeks perfecting a recipe for his favorite treat, blondies, and testing multiple batches on coworkers and family. I’d already given him his carefully wrapped box of blondies before our “talk,” and he drove away with them in the front seat of his car. I clearly remember the first post-shock anger crystallizing around that realization with the thought, “I hope you choke on them!” Hence, the final line of the poem provided a title with a literal meaning alongside others.)
Here, Part 4 – A Conversation Cont.
“Ah! Here. And…you’re here.”
-“I am. You sound surprised, yet not.”
“Well…the dry sauna at the athletic club?”
-“Don’t you read the Psalms?”
“The Psalms?…
Oh! ‘If I make my bed in hell.…’ Very funny.”
-“I thought you’d be amused.”
“But, …seriously?”
-“Seriously, it’s the quietest place I know.”
“Really? What about churches and chapels?”
-“They’re loud with expectation and desperation.”
“Oh. I can see that. And here…
well, it may be the only place that even my mind is quiet.”
-“Exactly. Everything is remarkable still in here.”
“There’s something about the heat.”
-“Yes. It brings your mind and body together to be present with each other.”
<pause>
“That’s not always a comfortable place for me.”
-“I know.”
“There’s a lot I don’t want to feel that directly.”
-“Yes.”
“I’ve lost my dreams.”
-“Lost?”
“Well, I’m pretty sure I know where they went, but they’re gone.”
-“Yes, sometimes people walk away with our dreams whether they intended to or not.”
“I just know I went to find them last week and there was nothing there.”
-“I’m sorry.”
“Thank you….
I’d ask why you didn’t stop them, but I’m long past thinking that you push people around like that.”
-“There’s no love under compulsion or manipulation.”
“Right.”
<pause>
“You know, I never know where these conversations are going to go when they start.”
-“Neither do I.”
“Really?”
-“Yes. They’re something we create together.”
“I like that.”
-“I’m glad.”
<pause>
“So what do I do about the dreams?”
-“What do you think?”
“Well, they didn’t die – then I could bury them or burn them. They just…left.”
-“Do you think they’re coming back?”
“I want to a lot of the time. But I think that’s clinging to something that’s gone, and even if they did come back, they wouldn’t quite be the same.”
-“That makes sense. Nothing that’s alive ever stays the same.”
“I don’t know what to do with the space they left.”
-“What do you want to do with it?”
“Not lose it.”
-“Why not?”
“Because…it’s part of the shape of who I am now, and I like who I am now.”
-“I like who you are now, too.”
“That’s good to hear. I don’t want to lose that.”
-“So you feel stuck between new dreams and losing who you are?”
“Maybe?…
There aren’t really any new dreams taking root. I have plenty of wishes flying around, but new dreams – not so much.”
-“And the wishes?”
“Most of them are connected with the dreams that are gone. Some of them still mean something on their own, and that’s good, but they aren’t the sorts of things that turn into dreams.”
-“Ah. I see.”
“What? What do you see?”
-“I see you.”
“You do?”
-“I do.”
<pause>
“Maybe that’s enough for the moment. I don’t know….
Can that be enough for the moment?”
-“It’s why I’m here. If you make your bed in hell…”
“You’re here.”
-“Yes.”
A Dream Denied
There is a particular pain in chances never given – a grief for the untried. For some of us, it can be harder than the pain of failure or the grief of loss.
“I never even got to try.”
It’s particularly galling when you deserved the the opportunity, but it was others less deserving who got the chance. Life, it turns out, rarely metes out opportunities based on the wherewithal to do something with them. It just doesn’t work that way.
And so the chance you long for is denied, and you never even get to try, to see if what you’re capable of doing can live up to all you know you can do deep in your heart.
The thing you’re made for passes by without stopping for you.
What happens to a dream deferred?
Does it dry up
like a raisin in the sun?
Or fester like a sore—
And then run?
Does it stink like rotten meat?
Or crust and sugar over—
like a syrupy sweet?
Maybe it just sags
like a heavy load.Or does it explode?
Perhaps different sorts of dreams may do all of these things. Maybe some more than one.
A chance never given, this is what’s hardest for me. It clings to me. It will not let me go.
My question is different from Langston Hughes’: what do you do with a dream deferred? With the chance never given? The one that clings like a pleading child to my legs, hungry with persistent passion for this thing that every fiber of my being recognizes. And I have no power to give it to her.
What do you do with a dream denied? The one that will not stop speaking, singing to me from behind that door which is closed and barred to me? (Such a beautiful song. Such a painful song.)
What do you do with a dream denied?
Unmake it? Unmask?
Dissect
and from component parts
piece together another creature?
Will it live again?
Breathe? Move?
What about the beating heart?
Can it be another thing?
Itself take another shape?Or will it die
and part of me with it?