I peel the pages of
memory
like an onion.
Transparent and
dense.
The first boy was cute.
Blond hair,
blue eyes.
We played
tether-ball.
We were eleven.
I moved away,
out of state.
I wasn’t sad.
I had high
hopes. Years
to discover
boys. Right?
Hope was intermittent.
Longing reared its
head; two
pronged with its
twin, loneliness.
Once, I counted up
the boys to men
between grade school
and menopause.
Seventeen.
Most were crushes.
One heated lust.
One love.
One tighly
grasped
dream that
when soured
revealed fake
promises
guaranteed to
disappoint.
Whew! Dodged
that bullet.
Now the seventeen
swim
in a fog that
thickens.
Their draw seems
so far away.
They’ve nearly
disappeared beyond
the horizon.
Is this the meaning
of stability?
This no longer caring,
is this a release
from angst or
just the death of
fertility?
I pry,
I dig,
I concentrate.
I pull at the onion
layers.
I bleed.
Names and times
come.
Feelings pricked
rebound.
I remember the drive,
the longing,
the desire,
the hope,
the fuzzy-headedness;
the frailty
when unrequited –
as it mostly was.
This disappearance
of that urge;
this disappearance
of need, is it
maturity?
Or disappearance
of life?
I don’t kid
myself that
I’ve grown beyond
the need to be loved.
Who has?
Who ever does?
To be honest,
life is easier since
the longings for
boys to men has
disappeared.
I’ll take love
through friends,
through family,
through what I
create;
through the one who
created me and
never left me
for a crush on
some one or
some thing
else.
So, sail away
old crushes
old flames
old loves
old dreams
old desires
old passions
old longings
old pains –
disappear.
I’m fine without you.
I’ve disappeared
into a new me.