Finding Home
By the border, my passport sticks to my face
like a kiss, or a slap.
There are women with children who look at me but won’t speak,
because speaking means worrying,
and our world isn’t made of worrying.
It’s like bathing with cold water on a winter evening, it doesn’t matter
—you’re cold anyway;
or like loving someone on a hot summer afternoon.
They find their way through the border,
I find mine, trying not to recognize faces that might know you.
For years now, I might not know myself without
looking through my bag;
I will learn to live with the desperate quiet of the morning sand,
and I will remember your name but not you.
Source: Poetry (July/August 2022)