Trance Essay for Remembering Images
At first, I spoke to my neighbor daily, in part because of the weather 
(he could still sit out on bench) 
in part because of vice 
(I was chain-smoking and he’d shout for one when I passed) 
but this stopped, in part because of trust 
(he did not believe I was smoking less and resented the imagined lie) 
in part because of routes 
(at first I added 15 minutes to my commute to walk north, past his apartment, towards 6th avenue, and up through the park, as this removes 25-50% of my anxiety, but now that I have lived here half a year, I find myself incapable of waking up early enough to permit this easy remedy, so I walk the other, faster direction) 
and in part because of novelty 
(having covered introductions, we now tend to say only “hello” when I do pass). 
I have a sense of what he looks like, due to this regularity, 
but I could not describe his building. 
Someone I was hoping to kiss informed me 
that it’s easy to remember 
images (all you have to do, they said, is take 
a lesson from a children’s book, one in which a girl could 
remember anything she wanted by saying “click,” 
and imagining she held a camera). Later, distracted 
on my walk home by the kiss’s memory, which came 
easily because my eyes had been closed for it, I took a wrong 
turn and struggled to find my building 
on an unfamiliar street. That’s why I’m studying: 
There is my own blue bicycle; the round planter to the left 
of the steps I use to enter, which the downstairs neighbor keeps 
tidy—cutting back the plants that don’t stay green 
in the winter, for example, but keeping the heartier cabbages 
watered—though I have never seen her do this work; 
somewhere between two and five pride flags, 
some of which are there year round while others 
appear only in June; a fire hydrant; the windows 
of the apartment that face mine, through which I see my least 
favorite bookshelves: they look mildly expensive 
and comprise a set of intersecting diamonds, making the books 
hard to remove and reshelf since they are all piled at slants; 
some scaffolding that seems to attract unhappy couples mid-fight; 
one set of table and chairs; a house that frequently puts books 
or toys or clothes out on the sidewalk for free. I know that 
there are two or more remarkable sculptures, but only 
because I remember remarking: one might be of a silver 
bust of a woman, maybe an angel or a pop star, while others 
are definitely at the base of the railings to the steps across the street, but I don’t 
remember now if they are dogs or birds. There is a statue of an owl 
on a window ledge I can see from one chair, and it often scares me. 
Now some buildings have Christmas lights, but I couldn’t say 
which, and that could easily lead me to turn down any other residential 
block. There is a lilac bush immediately next door, and in May, it helped me 
identify my building from very far away. But when we came 
to pick up our keys, I began to cry—it resembles 
another that grew in front of my childhood and I am 
sentimental. I sat down and demanded my roommate tell me 
why he hadn’t pointed out the lilacs earlier, and he threw up 
his hands: he had tried, but I had talked over him. 
When the kisser who recommended I take snapshots 
of my surroundings came to my apartment, there is a chance 
that they noticed many more things: they probably know 
whether it is broken up at any point by vinyl siding, or what words 
appear on the inflatable Santa down the hill. When we passed 
through the park, I did attempt to capture the snow lifting 
from the ground in spirals, the two bodies—one seated, one running—blocking 
some light, the corner-eye view of their metallic jacket. But I wanted
to remember what we looked like to the seated person, so replaced the above 
description with an imagined photo of two people connected 
by elbows, which I now see instead. 
My panic, when it comes in public, starts 
with lost vision; at home, with the heart. The classroom used to turn 
to white: I could make out, maybe, the light from the streetlamps 
visible from the class’ windows, but the shapes of the students’ faces 
and the windows themselves would be gone. I got very good 
at remembering where I had left my chair, sitting down, and pretending 
to glance thoughtfully at my notebook. If I said “yes, mmhmm, 
anyone else?” my students would feel prompted to speak 
without raising hands, and sometimes I’d take illegible 
notes on their comments in order to prolong the period 
before I would need my eyesight back. If no voices emerged, but 
I could register the electronic sounds enough to know my hearing 
was still with me, I would spontaneously become a person 
who lectures, or I would ask them to break into groups of 3-4 
to collectively answer some question. Years before, when sound 
and sight left together, I would sit on the floor 
of the subway hoping to faint from a more auspicious 
starting position. Looking at things indirectly—on a telephone, 
say—does not typically produce such a reaction.
Copyright © 2020 by Diana Hamilton. Originally published in Poem-a-Day on October 28, 2020, by the Academy of American Poets.
“In late December, I kept turning down the wrong block on my way home in Sunset Park, Brooklyn, so I wrote this poem to document the few visual details I remember. I also wanted to write ‘poetic images’ that were as straightforward as possible; I had been reading a lot of H.D., and while I couldn’t muster a ‘Sea Rose,’ I thought I could conjure the common lilac. On December 20th, the poet Charles Theonia told me they’d been assigned to write an essay in a trance, and I decided to do their homework myself: I listened to Donna Summer on repeat and visualized my block. A few months later, now that a pandemic has shut New York down, I see even less.”
—Diana Hamilton