Bearing by Nome Emeka Patrick
I know love only by its sheen on the dull edge of a blade.
Bearing
after Akpa Arinzechukwu’s Sentencing I walk on the edge of the river. At the end of the walk, I am still empty. I send a voicemail to my lover, & my voice on the phone is a flower wilting. I carve prayers outside my heart. In church, I pretend to see God. I write the psalms in my diary just to tear them out for spilling into my dreams. All my lovers look at me & see the knives of their own choice. They touch my face & it is not flesh they feel but the dust of me rising to the fore. At the mirror, I mouth, you’re enough you’re enough & that night, I look at my palms Say, you too have borne the weight of bearing the seeds. I can’t tell if my father is proud of me but I know his love is a wet coal. I’d burn my sleep to keep him warm. I can’t. I’m not that good of a son. I take the jacket off his back in my poems. In my poems, I leave him stranded at sea. He is never in a temple; never in a tent. I know love only by its sheen on the dull edge of a blade. All love & no sacrifice. All love & a scar in place of a son. I bought a plant on sale, & slept through its wither. I have held the soft spine of a rosary, Mouthed Hail Marys— yet the ache in my bones stays awake. Lord, I’m not a good lamb. I wandered away from the flock only to bleat into a storm. At the end, I swallowed my song. In my bones, all the music flames alive. In my bones, a dirge. In bed, I told Lucia I don’t know what prayer means, when I meant to say I have given up on the ritual of performance. I started a crusade. I walked inside a fog that whispered my grandmother’s name. I took my hands to an old temple & forgot to touch God with them. I stand inside a song that is not a song. I carried my tears around like little pellets. I walked barefoot through my ache. I walked on the edge of a river, not to understand its abundance but to listen to the whimper of my solitude. I’m a good man. I’m a good man. I sat by the water & eulogized my emptiness. Notes: “They touch my face & it is not flesh they feel/ but the dust of me rising to the fore” is inspired by Akpa’s “They look at me, & it is not them who hurt” “All my lovers look at me/ & see the knives of their own choice.” is inspired by Akpa’s “I smile, & the people who love me/ are disappointed.”
another ONLY POEMS poet that sends me into orbit. Thank you, so grateful
Oomph! "my voice on the phone is a flower /
wilting..."