The Q to Coney Island
I find a place
between a woman
with bodega grocery bags
and a man holding a worn violin case.
The seat carries
someone’s remnant heat.
At the next stop
a pregnant woman presses in front of me.
We smile.
I give her my heated seat.
We are all just bodies
accepting
other bodies.
A forearm against my back.
A shoulder settles into mine.
The soft weight
of a stranger’s coat
glances my leg
every time
the train jostles.
I like this.
I miss touch.
I spend so much time
carefully contained.
Teaching my daughter
about boundaries.
Locking my door.
Not training the bite
out of my dog.
Sleeping alone.
For twenty minutes
we are animals in a den.
Warm.
Tolerant.
Breathing the same air.
No introductions.
No disclosures.
No one earning
the right
to be this close.
The train brakes hard.
A stranger’s hand
lands briefly
on my waist
to keep from falling.
Then disappears.
As if it never happened.
I think
there are people
I have loved
on the train.
I let the car rock me back
and forth like a bassinet.
In my 20s
I would get panic attacks
on the train.
It would start with a pain
in some unreachable part
of my back.
Suddenly there wasn’t enough air.
I would have to sit
on the dirty ground
before my body
made the decision
for me.
Really, I just didn’t know
how to let go.
How to love
not being in control.
At my stop
I step onto the platform.
The smell of 90s marijuana.
Someone laughing three cars away.
The crowd separates
like water
running down
a well-tread bank.
Already I miss them.
13 thoughts on "The Q to Coney Island"
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Phebe, this is an interesting take on riding the subway. I have done a couple of tours of duty in WDC and know the Metro well. It got me to where I had to go but I didn’t really enjoy it. Frankly, I am still a bit intimidated by the NYC subway system. Anyway, with all that said, you have turned a dirty city subway into a beautiful poem. Job well done!
Thank you, John!
Such a compelling description
of riding the train. the way you’ve
more than overcome the fear
of strangers and actually embrace
the random touch of other riders as
liberating.
Thank you, Jim!
I really enjoy the way this poem moves!
Thank you, River!
Wonderful details and lots of great lines. Well done!
Thank you, Mike!
The title holds great rhythm and place.
The trip to Coney Island is one you color well withe riders laced with how what was once scary is now comforting.
Love: A stranger’s hand/lands briefly/on my waist/to keep from falling./Then disappears./As if it never happened.
Great line’s throughout. A fav “Not training the bite
out of my dog.”
Thank you, Pam!
I really enjoy how this poem balances movement with moments of progression and moments of regression, just like being on the train. Same with the emotions thoughout. “I like this./I miss touch.” It’s all so well written!
Thank you, Philip!
The vivid details, the pacing, it’s all so so good. I love “I let the car rock me back/and forth like a bassinet.” And, the final stanza with the last line wraps up the vignette perfectly.