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Monogamy

I can no longer wear monogamy

like a buffalo robe

to protect me from shivers

even though the heavy weight of warmth

has kept me safe.

 

It is not springtime

but I need to take it off

and be exposed to the elements

that call me.

 

The naked you

from whom I avert my eyes sometimes,

the sagging pouches

of our shared indulgence,

the grey hair trying to send a message,

insistent at my roots

… this is not a pretty picture,

but a real one.

 

There is a way I stand bereft

in your company,

and now that you are gone

I see the emptiness is mine.

 

I hope you will return

before the final departure.

 

I long for us to find,

or even look for together,

a new way to shiver.

 

I want day and night

to kiss our trembling shapes

with abandon,

infusing us with a mercy

that is not our own only.

 

Passion as a tender cry of loneliness

met,

a singing of the blues in the body,

a moan of doubt

more beautiful

than the rough vigour of certainty.

 

My love for you is changing shape

and I am terrified

and not yet bold.

I do need more

than you can ever give,

and want to spill my sweetness

into an endless spring.

This kind of ache

can turn into anger

at the small room,

forgetting

that the corridors are endless,

that we can live only in one place

at one moment,

quivering,

not even in sync,

but very near.

 

Forgive me if you can

for the way I have worn

this shared robe;

let us gently remove it

and place it on the sacred ground

to catch the wind’s caress

on our intermingled skin.

Published inPoems