Ode to the Wishing Well
I don’t want to be two people anymore.
Each always afraid of the other.
I don’t want a dichotomy of existence
between sink and swim.
I want to be my own meeting place.
Perhaps I’ll be a bridge.
One I haven’t managed
yet to burn.
Don’t make me the golden gate,
washing any more
of those beautiful feet
before their quick descent
and resurrection.
We don’t quite know
how to walk on water.
I know now that after the jump,
each collision creates a wave.
Oceans aren’t the only bodies
that ripple.
I know how each dive,
each surge,
has collateral damage.
We are all so easily pulled
by the undertow.
I wish I could go back
to say
I am angry
and thank you for that.
I wish go back
to tie a knot at the end
of a different rope.
I wish I could extend
a raft, a buoy, a hand.
I wish I could know
how you did it
or at least
how I never even saw
that last surge of water
coming and leaving.
I wonder how it feels
to stop treading water
and filling our lungs
in hopes we can
just stay afloat.
How does it feel to surrender
to our own unexpected tsunami?
I’m not sure if I knew
I could swim
before now.
I’m not sure if I knew
I could get out on shore.
I’m not sure if I knew
this pain is a pit-stop
not an exit.
With whatever echo
my voice carries underwater
I am so angry…
for all I know now
and
for all
I failed to know
before.