Every year since his death, on my father's birthday I write him a letter. This is an amalgamation of those letters, a poem that changes each year.
Dad, I know how you feel as a bag of sand. A body is only a dustbowl-- a pocket of dust encased by roots in a world which is only earth. I know how you feel as a cold breath which happens only once, eventually. I know how you feel when I'm on top of a mountain, seeing for miles without ever seeing a thing. Up here I am seven years away, however loud I yell, there is no breeze to carry me to you. Eventually, I'll resort to smothering my nose in your old shirt- a placebo scent... something to remind me you are not only sand. yet you are and me, only worth as much as the space I can take up, the air I can swallow, the love I can give. I know how you feel as a man anything but air. the feeling of gravity, the mind. i am only as much as my eyes will see, but could there be a way? of speaking to sand? a way to communicate without words or sound... a way of being. Dad, I know how you feel as a memory I try to recreate. more than a decade cannot separate me from that day. no matter how many times I follow the recipe I still fucked up the cake because I didn't listen to my damn nose. I am only as much as I am capable and right now I cannot even bake a cake. I cannot recreate the memory, days of bickering, measurements, and. joy the joy of creating and giving for the ones you love. I lift the old shirt to smell you find my nose is shot, worthless, caput. not even a placebo of the man who held me as an infant. the more time goes by the more I know how you feel as simply nothing that is, good for nothing. I'll force it, but I know how you feel as loved, cherished... so I start over-- make the damn cake and I don't fuck it up and I eat it up even the crumbs, even the dust... like I can consume a memory to make it last because I am the remnants of you. I am only worth as much as the love I can give myself.
“happy to be here”
coconut cake