When Love is a Doomed Horse
Abu used to say that “love is work manifest”, perhaps he got Gibran’s quote wrong (“Work is love made visible.”), or maybe he just made it up, who knows. My father worked hard. And according to his quote, if his calloused hands or the amount of mud on his boots was any indication at all; then he had truly loved. To work is to love.
Love is work
I knew a boy who loved to take in lost things. He cared for them as best as he could but he was not consistent so they all eventually perished. The sheep, the ducks, the puppies, the fish. Then there was the horse…
She probably died hissing
No, maybe quietly, just after the thud of her shivering brown coat
Hitting the ground
She should have run when she had the chance
She probably died at 3am
While he was dreaming about setting traps
For stars
She tried
She tried
She tied the rope around her own neck
She tried
She tripped
Thud
Shiver
Hiss
Brown Coat
Cold Earth
The foal was doomed anyway
Because no one knew it was there
It slid out of her easily
Like a bullet from the barrel of a gun
Like the saliva out of the side of his mouth at 3am
When I heard the news I knew
I knew that I was going home
I knew that it was the last time
He would bring horses to my heart only to abandon them.
November 27th, 2016
Love is a doomed horse
I know a girl who ran as fast as she could at the first opportunity she got. And then she was always running… headlong into her tomorrows as if her yesterdays were barking dogs at her heels. I never understood why she wouldn’t slow down, why she refused to gift herself with the present. She never believed me when I told her that all the dreams that would ever be dreamt were already dreamt; and that when we sleep at night our minds choose the ones that our hearts are ready for. At least that’s what I believe, and if she slows down maybe her heart would be able to receive the dreams that she was chasing. She is still running, that silly girl.
…. she and the boy-who-made-the-horse-die, used to catch crabs with a straw hat and curry them with dumplings while everyone else was eating long-water frijoles. They carved out their own trails on an unforgiving island; paths that I imagine will forever remain a part of their geography of love. He eventually used the memory of those paths to deceive her. But before that, long before that… they danced and they danced, they vowed to stop eating meat and become Rastas, they drank pineapple wine from the old lady on one of the streets off of La Avenida de las Americas. They loved like every tomorrow was promised to them. It was dizzying. There was never such perfection in a mismatch.
Catching crabs with a hat
You and I
Dreaming about
Never ending
Forever spending
Every breathing moment together
Trapping dreams with our bare hands
We had it
Once
But you grasped too hard
And broke a spell
And I keep finding empty shells
Daring the moon
With eyes wide open
A million cups of tea
A bicycle
And a metal token
How can this not be
Love?
… she always wrote poems for the boy-who-made-the-horse-die. In them, she was always dancing and he was always the fire. She was always thirsty, and he was the water. She was always bound and he was freedom. She was always longing and he was near. She was always drowning and he was “like her last breath of air.” She crafted those lines more devoutly than she prayed until she found herself over and over begging him to stay.
Love is a prayer
… she and the boy-who-made-the-horse-die had unfinished paintings and unfinished sentences. The longevity of their love could mostly be attributed to her ability to endure pain rather than their compatibility. And she endured it well… she loved him like an endless sunrise until the perpetual noon bared their souls to each other.
She used to close her eyes for a long time, hoping that if she was quiet enough, centred enough, withdrawn enough, that the cells in her body would remember how to avoid pain. Eventually felt like a century… and her eyes opened to the realization that her stillness was not enough. That pain would always recognize her.One day she decided to seek out endings for those unfinished sentences, she searched and found the words scattered, and like broken shells, unsure of their purpose. She strung them together with the last bits of thread from her weary heart. She had hoped that he would see the words dangling from her neck and utter them back into their yesterdays. He did not… but just stared blankly over her shoulder and through the window like he used to do on the train.
To love is to endure
So she wrote her last poems for him…You could only love me “dearly” from afar
Too close and I would remind you of the battle
Your scars,
Just under the surface of your skin now
Would begin eating you from the inside
While leaving you intact
And all I could do was love you… from afar
Too close and you would remind me of the time
100 fires blazed in our hearts
Cien fuegos
Cien promesas
Cien sueños
From afar clarity reigns in you
And like a benevolent queen
Oh how she softens your heart
Tempers your breath
Cools the soles of your feet
Dampens the raging fires… for a while
I wonder if for you
My memory has a smell
As yours does for me
I wonder if you grasp it like your last breath of air
I wonder if you burn through the chapters of your life
Like an insatiable prayer
My dear.
*************************************************************************************I loved you like a little girl loving . a . sorry . thing .
I loved you
Gave you my wings
Flesh for a ring
Oh how you used your breath to trick me
Sorry thing
You never heard me fall
Tears ignored
NEVER heard me call
Above the din of your fears and laws
Even when you felt small bones cracking under the weight of defeat
You pressed on
Daring fate
Your eyes were a gate that ///////////////////////////////// shut out
Your sorry heart
I tried to kiss them open
To let you back in…
But little girls shouldn’t play in the cold
Especially without their wings…
And a horse in the wild will always be a beautiful thing…
👏 muy bien!! Captivating read. I wanted more. I can’t wait to read a book from you.
Aww thank you so much… yeah that book Insha Allah