
Yeah, I know, it’s a weird title, but I couldn’t think of what else to call it. Letter to… Chernobyl Resident X? Letter to Nuclear Plant Employee? It all fits but it’s all Weird.
Continue reading
Yeah, I know, it’s a weird title, but I couldn’t think of what else to call it. Letter to… Chernobyl Resident X? Letter to Nuclear Plant Employee? It all fits but it’s all Weird.
Continue reading
A reflection on “Cornelia Street” and “Death by a Thousand Cuts” by Taylor Swift. Because it’s that kind of day.
Continue readingWritten as a diary entry late last night, so I suppose the apt opener is, “Dear Me,”

I wanted every cold night to last forever. I wanted to learn to let myself unravel like old gloves, held in your funny hands.
The fingers are still hanging open.
Like the screen door.
Like the sentence.
Ready for you to slip
in, close them, finish,
tie up loose ends and
make this have a better ending.

I wonder if I will wake to find myself missing the feeling of not having anywhere to go,
not having anywhere to leave.
I haven’t been outside in 42 hours.
I keep closing my eyes and seeing cornfields.
I know this city is beautiful, objectively,
even subjectively, if you get me tipsy and out
late at night when I can see the stars
needling their way through the thick dark
that closes over us like a hand.
I pretend the callouses brushing my shoulders
are God’s fingers, and not those
of some faceless something.
I know I used to say its name in my sleep.
I know I used to say it was the only thing I wanted,
to sit at this city’s knees and listen to its stories,
let it comb its fingers through my hair.
But it never did those things.
I couldn’t find the right doorstep,
or the right window, to crawl through
and slip into its bed, wrap my arms around it
and tuck my cold toes against its ankles.
I wake up alone, and roll over, bury my face
into the pillow so the sun can’t see my shame.
I tried to love it, for a while,
even when my love letters went unanswered,
but sometimes you just get tired
of waiting by the mailbox in the cold,
so I started thinking about colder places
where the frost was staved off by the fireplace
and the earth outside stretched on for miles,
gold and silver and smooth as icing.
I don’t know why I always want to leave
the places that feel most like home.
I don’t know if I’m afraid I’m missing something more,
or if I don’t want to be afraid of missing that.
But here I am now, in a place
that will never love me back,
and all I want is to go home,
turn back the clock, say
I’m sorry, I never meant to go,
I just didn’t know how to distinguish
being held from being trapped,
and if you’ll have me back, I promise,
I’m yours to keep, I always was.

I fell in love with New York in the winter. It was the only thing that made sense.