The Point of Touching
One night, long after the children and I had fallen asleep, my wife lit
candles in every room of our house, took off her clothes, and went
outside, naked, to sketch charcoal impressions of the candle-glowing
house full of sleepers and light she loved. And then she took a scissors
and cut a lock of hair from each of us--me, our children, herself--and
buried our hair at the drip line of our gumbo-limbo tree. She played her
cello then, in our candle-lit living room, until dawn yawned at the
windows, and then she blew out the candles, came to bed, and slept like a
leaf flowing down stream, and slept like words in some forgotten
language. When she woke, at noon, there was no one home to talk to, so
she never told us anything--except in the way she touched me anywhere
that evening, the way she kisses me some nights: with a yearning that
makes me stop growing older for a few moments, reverses the direction of
my blood, yes, and makes me glow. And that's the point of touching, isn't
it? To make our bodies real? And things like that are sometimes closer
than the world, closer than our words, closer even than ourselves. So
other nights I stay up beyond anyone, pacing the sidewalk like the good
husband I am, back and forth, back and forth--until I finally wear away
and vanish, like light itself, like life, or like fragrance from the
drowsy flowers growing taller and hairy around our gumbo-limbo tree.
Moving Bodies
There's no one else home, so you walk around your large house from room
to room and around again, touching familiar objects, touching yourself,
humming, thinking thoughts that disappear as soon as you think them. Your
body feels well-muscled and sleek under your new clothes, and you think
about that, too, as you walk around, think about how strange and distant
your body sometimes seems to you, how deeply its functions fascinate even
as they distance you from it, your body, the only ground you're sure your
self knows, if indeed it knows anything at all. And right now in a
distant city, in an office at the top of a glinting skyscraper, a woman
you wouldn't even recognize remembers how you danced one mid-winter
afternoon, by yourself in the middle of a waxed gymnasium floor, to the
Spanish music from the janitor's transistor radio, how you twirled and
smiled and then looked across the gym at her, suddenly embarrassed,
turned and walked away. And she looks out her window, down across the
city, and she sees you clearly, the way you turned away, and she feels
again the urge to run after you, to grab your arm, to ask you please to
dance with her. And even as she thinks of you, whose name she's probably
never known, you hear a salza melody, you start dancing in
your living room.