Undiagnosed Discomfort
Asked if I still keep doves,
I recall I once did,
but like the petals of down they
shed, I’ve lost their names,
markings, the number of
bodies I held in my palm,
fed capsules of bread I’d
rolled between thumb and
finger, til my mother set
them free, out of feelings
of guilt, and it’s not that
I want to cage anything
again, it’s that I don’t
remember the last time
I nurtured something,
fed wafers into mouths and called
feathered children to my hand.
So when one falls in the yard,
I declare it ours
and even though for the
first time we’ve agreed
on a name for a child,
this is not a Paloma we will
keep. You fear disease and
I fear your coldness, and to
prove your loyalty and parent skills
you drag me to ER for
pains we’ve been ignoring, but they won’t
let you in, (which makes me think
maybe there is something to see.)
I’ve never seen inside of me, no
tenants invited to nest. I look
for a Paloma, some intruder kicking
my plans and apprehension, but it’s
so fucking empty in there.
No Paloma, tiny heartbeat,
weight of a dove.