though he begged you to stay. Your heartâs betrayals, your wild, spiteful spirit and brief moments of respite, your contracts with your conscience, your father and mother, and your travels near and far, when you fell in love with cities, the sky, or entire regions of uninhabited land.
Love doesnât always have to be about people, no, not necessarily. You can fall in love with a city, its many smells, how quiet it is under the snow. Small and large streets and the dusk in the glowing windows that awakens a desire in you, when you stand in the streets with your eyes glazed over simply from wanting to experience every imaginable life, everything behind those windows. You want to tear them from the walls and place them in your chest simply because you know and understand it all. Simply because you love these blinds, curtains, shades, the fraying bits of carpet behind the flowerpots against the walls and windows. A quick or fancy dinner, cats on windowsills, and boiling pots in kitchens. And how calm he is when he comes home from work. And how she tilts her head for him to kiss her cheek. Here is your victory, your life in these basic, little things that everyone will gulp down until the end of time like theyâre dehydrated and, when theyâre drunk from it, roam along the courtyard walls, craving only that eternal shift between night and day. The shade and a nap on a striped couch while he makes you tea. A moment within yourself in the cozy warmth, when the hands of the clock donât stab at your dry, tired eyelids like steel knives. Youâll crave the solitude of an old woman, her cat, her parties, and bed full of crumbs from the grandchildren, especially in November, and inside is bright and cozy while outside itâs dusky and cool, and a little freezing. Outside where you stand with your only heart and life in your chest, knowing it allâbut how?âand loving, loving, loving it.
But there is only this moment in the present, this excessive, ruthless sense of awareness, and the acrid scent of the earth.
Why do I walk around with an orchestra playing in my head?
And she starts to crack like a pine tree. Her bark peelsâlayer by layer, falling off in flames. The forest breathes and grows, stands modestly, doesnât try to prove anything, just exists. She knows the forest is perfect, but the forest itself doesnât know that. Existence asks too much of a person, too much of this complicated structure, this ball of nerves with a heart, brain, and eyesâhow can it forget? Itâs an endless struggle, a whirlwind of activity, tendencies, thoughts, instincts, responsibilitiesâand if not those, then at least the slightest inkling of them now and then. Lifting your hand to change channels on the TV, taking the grilled cheese out of the toaster oven or just running the red light at a packed intersection. Or like when you get back home after being abroad for a long time and, as you look out onto the silky reeds under the sliding shadows of clouds, you ask yourselfâwhoâs the one seeing all this?
Or when youâre in a new place and get word that your mother has died. I donât want to hear it, your tired, scarred, cynical heart cries. Your heart doesnât want any more pain. But something inside you trembles, shiversâa tiny, significant dream right before you wake up, or the screech of an animal as loud as an overworked motorâand you get the piercing realization that your next breath could never come. But it does, and youâre simultaneously thrilled and inexplicably disappointed. Because the question of the heart remains. If someone was once close to you, very close, and is now dead, and you imagine their heart, which youâve never seen, but can pretty well imagineâand why shouldnât youâas a once functional, but now stiff, immobile shell at the bottom of a grave. And you try to imagine what the heart is doing down in that grave. Has