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in a dream
this place is different now
because i am.
i walk the streets that lead
to dilapidated childhood parks
and best friend’s houses
and farrell football fields.
i now walk these streets as a person
who knows who i am,
as a person who has severed
connections with these streets
to make room for me.
i strive to live a life
awash in affect,
hammocked
in hallucination, etherized
in essence. i sigh
as i think of my high school
and how it’s magnetic
modernity immobilizes
idiosyncrasies. i remember
how it sent me to
the yellow room.
the room where stares
are stapled to you firmer
than the chairs are to the floor.
where you are split
open, in two, then spliced.
in that room i thought of sylvia
plath and how the world
drops dead when she shuts
her eyes. i open mine.
i see that i, too, have
a deadly
world that needs to die
each time i do.
sylvia dies well.
i die in yellow.
i die next to men
in beds
and by acidic idioms
that elude
paternalistic chapped lips
and with the knowledge that
beautiful things can end, too.
they say that trauma
is something that needs
to get processed.
process, like bessemer,
like lesser
than progress.
i mechanize reproductions
of the memories
but am still in beds,
not being productive.
not being processive.
i walk these streets alone,
but never at night.
they bellow to me.
they read buffalo,
hylan, dryland
way. i walk these streets
with desperate perspective.
i walk these streets begging
to always be
similarly desperate, as being
desperate means you felt.
these streets know
that i have lacerations
larger than love.
these streets know
that when i am not walking
them i can’t stop
remembering.
friendship flashes
before my eyes
but never seeps into these streets.
i shall befriend grief.
i walk these streets
to defamiliarize.
i walk these streets in a dream.
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This poem is a kind of catharsis. I wrote it after returning to my hometown after my first year of college—a year of learning, grieving, meeting, seeing, and generating a sense of self. I wanted to emulate the feeling of dreaming in this poem, describing things as if they were trapped in some sort of hellish dreamscape.