In Praise of Hands
I miss hands. I miss their flimsy, awkward quality –
the way one looks when offered while still searching
for a reason. I miss being young, lining up after the baseball
game, waiting to shake the hands of the players on the other
team. I miss the way we would joke about spitting in our palms,
& the way almost no one ever did. Why was that? Something
about a hand, I think. At night, when I can’t sleep, I play
the piano against my thigh. Sometimes I hold a baseball
so tight against my palm it becomes, like it had once been
for so long, part of my hand. Sometimes I poke the soft spot
of your nose with my thumb. Sometimes I put my own fingers
in my mouth, sometimes inside your own. It’s something
against loneliness, the use of a hand. It’s a way to say I’m here.
Or see me. Or I’m sorry. Or don’t worry. Or never mind. Or
come, come, please hurry, I need you, you won’t understand
until you arrive. I miss the flagging down, the high five. I miss,
most of all, goodbyes. Today at the airport I saw one for the first
time in years. It was like it’d always been: the hands around
the body, & then each pair of hands in each pair of hands,
& then, finally, one face pulled closer to the other, & then held
in the hands. No words. Only the way those hands might’ve said:
I love you, or don’t go, or go if you must. But love, I want to tell you
why I stood there for so long, missing what I will always miss
of touch. It was the way each hand said love when the mouth
had no words for love, & how that was more than enough.
When I Think of How Chuck Knoblauch Sometimes Could Not Throw the Ball to First Base
It’s hard, I think, to do one small thing well.
Sometimes I wake in the soft light of just-after-dark
to make the coffee & spill the grinds from the day before
all over the floor. I stop at the store on the way home
from work & forget the oil when all I really needed
was oil. I’ve lost twelve plants to neglect when they
only cared for just the slightest bit of water. As a kid,
I watched Chuck Knoblauch double pump his arm
toward first. I watched him sail a throw far over every
player’s head. I watched him stand alone in disbelief.
I laughed then, & pretended I could be someone
better than someone failing. There is one story
of the world that I have spent my whole life trying
to erase. I still cry a little bit at every ache of me
that feels like a blemish. I still hurl every small cliché
at my waking body to tell myself I am alright even
when the world is a wound I am wound up in.
If it possible, as some say, for life to be perfect,
then why does the rhythm of a heart sound
so anxious? Dear god of the stubbed toe, god
of the friend’s birthday once forgotten, god
of the missed call, the bad memory you cannot
shake, the jostled stranger’s shoulder, the one day
you are too tired to be joyful – dear god of the recipe
that calls for one more pinch of salt than you have,
forgive us this world that leaves us unforgiven.