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NIshta Mehra

Grief


When the picture of Hanuman fell off the

wall // I should have known,

just as I knew Trump would

win when I pulled Shiv’s first

passport from the mailbox on Election Day.

Truth is always stranger than fiction, since

fiction ought be believable but life

need clear no such bar.


These days a kind of quantum sandwich,

timeline folded  //  con-cen-trate

our child works to divide

syllables and I try to learn how to

re-compartmentalize my heart.

Years ago, I returned to you

from the forest of bereavement, unable to say

what had changed, other than everything.

Tunneled inside my own heart, feral

girl in bloody furs, packing the

entrance of her cave with

snow.


I wanted to grow into a woman who transformed

her own shape, rather than having it done

to her like each ravaged nymph & dryad read about

in Edith Hamilton’s

Mythology.

                Sixth grade: talk about An Education:

how to identify metaphor, hyperbole, but

never what would have been most useful for a classroom full

of girls: how to foil the rescue plot, how to read

between the most important // lines.

How to say, in seven different languages—the reason

my mouth is filthy is that you’ve been feeding me

poison

all along.


“If you swallow that pit, a cherry

tree will grow in your stomach!” Let it,

I used to think, that would shut

the grownups up, if I opened my

mouth and branches came spilling

                  out




//


The day he was elected, I held weeping female students

in my arms. They could no longer pretend; they wept with

premeditated exhaustion, all of the effort

to come, every lie they would systematically unlearn.

Today it became a Class-C Felony to

                provide hormone therapy or blockers to transgender minors

in Alabama; I wept in the faculty workroom after reading

the news. A gay man held me in his arms &

I could feel the terror of recognition

through his skin.

Terror of inheritance.

Terror, this tribe.

Our daughter is a girl because she is,

because she says so. // A-la-bam-a

Some sounds divide so easily on the

tongue.


                What I seek is not reassurance but noise, primal response.

                Jesse plays “Sinnerman” driving home on Super Tuesday;

how fitting—don’t you know we need you, Lord?

I am discovering that one of the gifts of your raising

is that apocalypse is not at all difficult to

imagine. At night we speak

of passports & plans, what it takes to leave

your life behind while it still works,

while it is not yet

not working, but you fear the day is coming

soon.



If grief is preparation,

then this ground of mine sure is fertile.

             Kingdom come,

along with every word I’ve been trained

not to use. The rock may say, I can’t hide you,

but Nina’s voice is

still   //  a balm.




Human Animal


If things end badly, I want you to know

it’s not as if we weren’t trying to discern the shape

of the shadows in the distance.


When the novelty of novelty wears off,

              what is left to sustain us?

If we were teenagers, words on a

screen would constitute a relationship; as it is,

               I want bodies in proximity,

               words spoken - saliva - breath.


My child tells me of the nature documentary she

watched with her grandmother, about crabs who eat their

fellow crabs once they’ve died, and my initial

thought was “How awful,” but the eight-year-old

found it elegant how, in this scenario, nothing goes to

             waste // Alas, we human animals

are not quite so well-designed—or perhaps so well designed as to

             have hijacked our own best interests?


How we took things for granted: every, every minute.


Technology will never save us, and neither

will tech bros.


            Give me poetry in times of crisis: at my dying father’s

bedside, as the experiment we call America collapses,

when I look across the bed at my sleeping wife and

imagine seeing her for the final

            time through the screen of

            a phone.


After Brunelleschi distinguished perspective, there was

no going // back. So too

we will find

we cannot measure against what once was,

“how it used to be.”

In Latin, animalis equals having breath::

but humans are the only animal to endanger

themselves by forgetting.

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