Saturday, April 15, 2023

The Django

Sitting again with you at the Django, waiting for Lucy and Grant to take the stage – our doppelgänger couple – you (as from Day One the one for me despotically luminous creature in the room) buy as if you're unhappy a double shot of vodka. Which you consume in a single swallow. So I order a bottle of wine and a second and by the end of the night we share with neighbors what we won't finish alone.

 

And you weren’t unhappy, not then, and not when dozing on my shoulder on the A Train, or in my arms in bed after maybe puking a bit. In the near-dawn while you slept I thought: They see us as allies, too, recognizing our surprise, gratitude, safety.


Those things don’t last but probably shouldn’t. The courageous being condemned to grief by their courage.

 

Still, listening half-drunk we knew we’d found what Lucy was singing about, what Grant played, and I suppose we knew we'd ruin it. But we listened long enough to forget what we feared and let ourselves become what we heard.


The songs were right. Nothing else awaits.


Friday, April 7, 2023

The Universe Gives You What You Need

Sitting on the stoop last night around midnight, a warm night, or it had been, the wind now starting to blow, and a white BMW parked in front of me with two men seated drinking and listening to music, windows down.

 

I’m somewhere through a second or third cigarette when the man in the driver’s seat looks over at me and says, “How you doin?”

 

“Going through a breakup,” I say.

 

The man in the passenger seat gets out of the car and walks around, over to me. “Come here, man, have a drink.”

 

I come off the stoop and he gives me a plastic cup and pours out some tequila. “Thank you,” I say. Together we drink.

 

The man in the driver’s seat says, “What you want to hear?”

 

“My friend, whatever you’re feeling is fine,” I say.

 

He says, “I think you need some Phil Collins.”

 

I imagine he says this because I’m white. I say, “No, how about some Marvin Gaye.”

 

“Marvin Gaye? Ok, I got you.” He puts on Marvin Gaye and gets out of the car and we all have another drink.

 

I say, “You’ve been through it too, right?”

 

“Man, we all been through it,” the driver says. “How long?”

 

“Together a year and a half,” I say. “But I loved her for a lot longer than that.”

 

“Just happened?”

 

“It’s been happening,” I say. “Tonight it feels like it just happened.”

 

Marvin Gaye at that moment singing about blue teardrops, I hear, with the passenger singing along. I light another cigarette and we listen. The passenger stops singing and says, “You gotta keep on, just like the sun. Went down today and it’s night but in a few hours it’s gonna come back up. That how you gotta do. You will. I see it.”

 

The driver says, “And even now it’s night but you still got the stars. Just gotta look up.”

 

“And this,” I say, “us together.”

 

“Exactly,” the driver says. “You understand.”

 

The passenger says, “Man, you speak another language?”

 

“Spanish,” I say. “I lived in Argentina.”

 

“See,” he says, “I knew you spoke another language because you said that about us together.”

 

“I grew up Mormon,” I say. “Went there to save them and they saved me.”

 

“You were one of those accomplices or collaborators or whatever they call them,” the driver says.

 

“Missionaries,” the passenger says.

 

“That’s it, missionaries,” the driver says. He toasts the passenger with his empty cup and the passenger pours us another round.

 

“Came back,” I say, “and I didn’t know what I was. But I knew I wasn’t God, which is what I thought I was when I went. Still don’t know what I am but that’s ok, I guess.”

 

“Man,” the driver says, “you know what you are, you a human being, just like us.”

 

“No more, no less,” the passenger says.

 

The driver points at the passenger and says, “This man here, he’s an inspirational speaker.”

 

“Just what I need tonight,” I say and we all laugh.

 

The passenger says, “I’ll tell you this, man. And I’m gonna tell you this because I think you can hear it and understand it. You can see for yourself if it applies to your situation, I don’t know. But in a relationship, we’re always tryin to turn the other person into something we know. Because we know how to deal with that. Usually that means we tryin to turn them into our parents. Probably the bad parent because we convinced somewhere inside them is the bad parent, and we gotta know if it’s there. The killer. So we try to bring it out. And if we do, we run because we knew all along we were right, they a killer. And if we don’t, we still run, because we scared. We got this new thing we don’t know how to deal with. So you got to figure out why she ran – she, right?”

 

“Yeah,” I say.

 

“So figure out why she ran. Because you turned into a killer or because you didn’t. If you turned into a killer, then you sittin on this stoop tonight is on you. And if you didn’t, then you be awright.”

 

“I think I turned into a killer,” I say.

 

“Or you was one all along,” the driver says.

 

“I started to let myself be mean to her,” I say.

 

“She was waitin for that,” the passenger says. “So there you go.”

 

“I need another drink,” I say.

 

“I got you,” the passenger says, and we all drink.

 

I say, “I thought I was trying to be something new in her life. Not one of her ex’s. Not her father or her mother. For her father she can do no wrong and for her mother she can do no right.”

 

“It’s like that with daughters sometimes, man,” the driver says.

 

“But there has to be another space,” I say. “A new space. I thought that's what I was trying to find.”

 

“There is,” the passenger says. “Love is like nature, my man, love has both life and death. Sometimes we think it has to be all life. And we give every drop of blood to keep it alive. But there’s death in love, too, and you gotta accept that. You can’t kill yourself tryin to keep it alive, that makes no sense. You just have to let it live and die and live, just let it flow, let it do what it do. We get told” – he points at all of us – “we gotta fix everything but in love there’s nothin to be fixed. You just let it flow through, like you standin in a river, because you are. The universe is a river you just gotta stand in. A river of life and death, a river of love because that’s what love is, life and death. You try to fix it, now you the killer. You tryin to fix somethin that wasn’t broken and never has been. The universe or this girl. The universe gives you what you need if you let it.”

 

We’re all quiet for a moment. I look at the driver. “Damn,” I say, “you weren’t lying.”

 

“I told you, man,” the driver says. “Inspirational speaker.”

 

“I gotta give you a hug, man,” I say, and the passenger and I hold each other.

 

“You be awright,” the passenger says.

 

“One more?” I ask.

 

“Hold up,” the driver says. He taps on his phone.

 

Phil Collins, “In the Air Tonight,” starts up on the car stereo, Harlem-loud. We stand there for a while and listen.

 

Soon, tears on my cheeks, I say to the driver, “You were right. That is what I needed.”

 

“I know,” he says. “I know.”

 

“We've all been there, right?” I ask.

 

“What you talkin about, man?” the driver says. “We all there now.”



Tuesday, March 21, 2023

Carnage

You take my hand, lead me

To the bedroom, and soon

We are covered in blood.

 

Showering later you say

Something kind about my face

And I think: Your face is

A tyrant, your body

A thundering cavalry –


And when by text

However long later

You ask if after

Having lost you


I’m ok, I write, We made real

What I'd most feared.


You probably thought

Upon reading that and now

Upon reading this: He


Has a penchant for self-

Pitying melodrama. You

Wouldn't be wrong, but

 

I remember your hand,

Your blood, your sighs,

The sight of your hair

Wet with sweat across

Your cheek while writhing

bloodsmeared beneath me,

Around me, you were,

For an infinite

Moment, mine.

Thursday, February 16, 2023

"Absolutely Not."

A couple of days ago – Valentine's Day – walking east on 123rd I passed a man on the phone with his daughter. He had her on speaker, or they were Facetiming, and as I passed I heard her say, "Dad, yes, they can." The voice and intonations of an eight-year-old Black New Yorker, high and forceful, swinging, confident.

The father replied, "Absolutely not. A boy cannot give another boy a valentine. Absolutely not."

The girl, even more forcefully: "Yes, they can."

And the father, "Absolutely not. Absolutely not."

They continued in this vein; soon I was out of earshot, Central Harlem mixing their voices into the city's howl.

I texted my brother Nathan. Understandably, he seemed less charmed than annoyed. He said, "Good lord. Turn around and say, your daughter is right."

"Or," I proposed, "my brother does it, so apparently they can."

I continued on to my friend Brad's up on 129th. From there down to Nomad, then over to Chelsea; eventually, home. The argument between father and daughter forgotten.

But this morning, finding it difficult to sleep, I remembered their exchange and found myself thinking about that father's "absolutely not."

In the first place I was struck by its futility. Plainly we do live in world – certainly we do in New York City – where boys can give valentines to boys. I thought, I was listening to a man defend a world that no longer exists. His daughter lives in the real world – in the actual world. And he was trying to get her to live in his world, a defunct world, the world of the past.

I suppose this experience – realizing that one lives in a world that no longer exists – is one of the horrors of aging. That horror might explain why so many older people become, relative to their younger selves, conservative, reactionary, and grumpy. In any case, their particular argument is enacted daily in various forms by millions of kids and their parents.

But beyond that, I thought, his "absolutely not" captures the horror of conservatism generally and its determination to compel us to live in a nonexistent world. To deny the world's fluidity, the permanence of change, in short: reality. The world. That little girl lives in the world. Her father does not.

My reaction at the time, having not been oppressed by that father's particular "absolutely not," was to find their argument charming and reason for hope. Nathan, who understands that "absolutely not" all to well, who has heard it ringing in his ears all of his life, wanted a fight. One must defend reality, the hard-earned world-as-it-is, against those who would have us live, whatever their reasons, in a world that no longer exists.

Friday, February 10, 2023

Ten Things I'll Never Do Again

1) Watch The Bachelor, obviously. After finishing our Blue Apron (having argued again about how long to cook the chicken). You secretly film my reactions to the Rose Ceremony. Laugh at the way I go from feigning indifference to yelling at the screen. To saying, "Can you believe the way these people sabotage their own happiness?"

 

2) Listen, still groggy with sleep, to you tell me about your night’s dreams. I squint at the light coming through the blinds. Your large eyes, unblinking, examine my face. "You should write those dreams down," I say. "I should write them all down."

 

3) Stand on our balcony and watch you drive away in a rush, the boys due to arrive. You take the left turn off Continentals Ave, accelerate – small in the gray sedan – away, up Ralston. Going to your mother's for the weekend. Until Sunday evening, when you call or text, asking when you can come home.

 

4) Walk to 122nd and Adam Clayton Powell. Take the M2 to 110th, east to 5th Ave, down to 92nd. Get off the bus and walk to 2nd Ave, to wait outside Knickerbocker Plaza for you to descend. Hail a cab or walk with you to NR. Hot ramen. Later, at Bar & Essen, a nightcap. The slow walk back. Outside Knickerbocker I hug you and tell you I love you and watch you pass through your lobby, see you say goodnight to the doorman. I walk then for a while. At some point rent a Citi bike and ride back to Harlem, using the Central Park loop, crying or trying not to cry.

 

5) Stand holding you, my eyes closed. Rest my chin on top of your head; inhale. Think: A perfect fit.

 

6) Argue with you about getting a dog.

 

7) Drive together up the coast to Crescent City, on to Portland, or down the coast to Monterey, or from Salt Lake City to Las Vegas. Or in an Uber along the Cabo San Lucas coastline. Or, most memorably, on a luminous Saturday morning, from Belmont to Berkeley, to the Wright Institute for your applicant's interview, to the beginning of the rest of your life.

 

8) Hold you while you remember your father.

 

9) Help you: edit a paper, decipher a reading, think through a patient, compose an email, cope with one of your brothers’ calls. Brew your morning coffee, brew our nighttime tea, undress you, fall asleep in your arms, fall back asleep (after telling you, "A nightmare. It’s Ok. You're safe").

 

10) Weep like this. Motionless, silent – stunned by gratitude and regret and terror. Because I don't know how to imagine a world without you. A siren goes by, fades; Harlem light, so unlike California's – colder, more severe – falls on some flowers I put in the window. I think, One day this grief will pass. But I don't want it to pass. Then you'll really be gone.