And when your fourth love leaves you,
you will want to kill yourself but
you won’t. You no longer think of suicide
as a house you will build one day.
Your fourth love, who is your first
real love, who brought you peace
when your whole body was a gun:
when she leaves you, ask your roommate
to hide the knives because you will carve
her name into all of the food in your fridge.
Stop showering. Warmth will remind you
of her. Masturbate in public. Hope someone
catches you. You need to feel vulnerable
in front of anyone else. Try to burn her
clothes. Try to fall in love with strangers.
Try to fall asleep without her: open the windows:
she would have wanted them closed;
turn off the radio: she can’t sleep without
noise—you can’t sleep without noise,
but noise will sound like her whispering
you into the world of lights and breakfast;
make the rain sound like nothing, make
the rain sound nothing like her voice.
Don’t be alone. When you are alone,
you won’t do anything you did with her,
so you won’t do anything. Marvel at how she,
the patient gardener, the bringer of sleep,
she who draws the bath and lights the candles,
she who made you someone who could make
himself into someone, she made you want
to live more than anything else, and now
she makes you want to leave the world
because you have seen it. In her
you have seen the color and shape
of your perfect life and now the children,
the house, the arguments about tablecloths,
they are all fading like things left in sunlight,
like any dream left too long in the light.
For months—years—every time you see her
you will want to kiss her. When you do,
you will expect pain to come like the old dog
you could never bring yourself to put down,
but there will be none. You will remind yourself,
she will remind you, you will remind each other,
that this is for the best, that you are physically
incapable of loving one another, and in those
moments you will be lying, your heart screaming
I CAN I CAN I CAN. But you’ll stay silent.
Because of her. Because she asked for this.
Because she filled something in you
that’s still full, even though
she’s gone.