Across an Open Field
Migratory birds make their shapes—
I hold my thoughts as separate from me
so that I can see them.
That the darkness I feel
is not mine, does not belong innately to me. . .
That many people have chorded their sadness
around me. . .
Whatever that winter was,
I have made it through.
Now I stand in diminished light, walking the lake’s darker edge.
Each time we return to a memory, we change it.
So, when I tell you about those nights in the jungle, sleeping
in hammocks, the sky, for once
not dulled by human light
and how the boy, next to me, kept telling me I was beautiful,
reaching through the hammocks to touch my skin, and how
I could not stand it
Does language move me closer, or further away?
Back then, I clung to my own ugliness.
If I was ugly, then I could not be loved.
Each day, river water stripped my skin of dirt. I thought
it was safer to feel my shame
than it was to want.
Maybe like everything, healing has a season, dormant, but rooting.
Like how, today, my heart is full of romantic feeling, I can see
it everywhere: love on the faces of strangers on the train.
Each smiling softly into their phone, or gazing
past the darkness.
For so long, I picked people who could not get along,
Desire was an arrow, but now desire
is the field.
I have three choices: to drift through life
anesthetized, to soften. . .
The lake looks frozen, but it is not.
From Saints of Little Faith by Megan Pinto (Four Way Books, 2024). Copyright © 2024 by Megan Pinto. Reprinted with the permission of the publisher.