Wednesday, June 30, 2021

Childhood Dreams

 Childhood Dreams 

We build ourselves a castle somewhere 

by the Caspian Sea. You write me poetry 

and I paint you watercolors. We stage 

our one-act plays and roll gracelessly, 

stealing things we can afford. 

How we steal peaches and mangos 

from the marketplace and 

pass them between bites: my mouth 

the perfect replacement to yours. 

We suck lollipops on the playground 

and laugh without quite knowing why. 

Untouchable, giggly, we slap 

the mosquitoes that want a taste 

of our paradise and laugh at ourselves 

for leaving the towels by the pool 

every time. They say we are being lousy 

teenagers and we smile at them. 

And when the sun sets and turns 

our still-burnt skin pink, we squeeze 

our hearts and pray to fireflies 

and comets that we never split up. 

No, we are too good friends, and 

the summer     is too alive, and 

the fading light is shining through 

the grass too beautifully for that. 

Against the torpid whirs and murmurs 

of such a scene, you beckon me to 

listen close with one powerful sweep 

of the arm, and you declare it to be 

a la niña summer, long nights 

and short days. “These only come 

every 4 years, you know,” you hush 

officiously. You tell me the daylight 

won’t last and I pretend to be sad 

while the clouds roll past our heads 

and everything sighs— how dirt sticks in 

damp clusters under our toes. But I can’t 

wait to raise my tired fingers and trace 

the muscles of every constellation. 

Looking back, you aren’t quite 

right about that. This summer 

has lasted far too long, has haunted 

the west every year since the Jurassic, 

and broken friendships boast an even 

more illustrious history. But that 

doesn’t matter. It is intoxicating to think 

that in our young lives, we might get 

the sort of magical golden summer 

that comes once in every 4 years, 

the type that graces the memories of 

writers and smiling seniors alike. 

We fill brown paper bags with unripe fruit, 

tearing off leaves that blink like human eyes. 

We crush flowers in between our teeth, 

the two of us whose bodies have 

no sweetness. Stale coca-cola, 

warm milk and honey dripping 

down our throats. We undress and 

dance under the pink clouds, where 

the cotton curtains are still closed, 

blush and bashful. Spring has 

disintegrated, the heat coils 

in the wind. I feel the veins inside 

my chest pulsing, wrapping around 

every bone of my skeleton. Waltzing on 

that road too long, how the radio snags 

on a wave and the sky catches vermillion 

fire, electric and strange. Even if it came 

with the static noises of a chaotic 

harmony of naivety, that was okay—

we were happy to claim it as the 

soundtrack of our prime regardless. 

They say we are wasting our lives, 

 letting days pass us by. The flowers fade 

like pastel paintings. Parasites chew 

the still water we hold our breath under. 

Through summer skies, sunlight berates 

the fibers of our lollipops melting near the 

playground, collapsing into a dirty pool 

of color and sweetness.

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