
I started this when I lived in Brooklyn and struggled for grace in a city that grants moments of beauty and ugliness breathtakingly close to one another. Now I live in a place where things are a different kind of ugly and the beauty is pedestrian. I struggle with that.
The woman tells the story of her father teaching her to swim, his hands supporting her in the water, the important lesson of learning to float because floating will save you if you are imperiled. I try to imagine a father's hands on my waist, a weightlessness, and I do, I can, but it is not imagining it is memory. Of my father lifting me up, up but we are not in water, we are on the roof of our high rise building, and now he is holding me over the edge too far too far and I do not know what madness, what lesson he is trying to impart with my life balancing on his hands, on this parapet.
A long late afternoon run means I am running down the sun. The clouds that started out as huge white ocean liners drifting turn dark bellied and unhappy. The gleaming limestone of the court building with its shockingly green counterpoint of verdigris balustrades washes out and ceases to sparkle as the sun drops below downtown skyscrapers. Planes lowering on final descent into La Guardia fizzle silver as the light lowers in perpendicular trajectory. The minute hands on the clock tower revolve, the hour hands tick forward, and the lights that pick them out prick on fuzzy in a humid dusk. And now I am done running and it is time to go home.
It's strange to see New Yorkers unencumbered, with no shopping bags, purses, messenger bags, groceries we are always schlepping. So he already gets my notice for having nothing in his hands.
I am watching the sparrows on the barbed wire in the back of the house. They are plain little birds, but I am happy to see them. When all the trees in the back were cut down in Phase I of destructo garden mode I was afraid I wouldn't get any more avian visitors, but here they are, peeping and hopping between strands of angry metal and the broken glass set into the top of the cinder block wall.


I wake alone in my clean white bed, hands shaking just a little. I think of beds I am not in, lives I am no longer welcome to share. I wonder when my toothbrush was thrown out. When my emails were erased. When my phone number was deleted. When was I erased, when did I cease to matter. There are men sleeping in rooms in this city, and I know what they look like, I know their walls, their sheets, their night mutterings, and if I could say just one thing it would be I am sorry, I am sorry, I am sorry.
You are 47 years old, so when you finally find a good man with a steady job, you are extra grateful. Yeah, he's a little mopey, a little dark, but those stalking charges are from that bitch of an ex who is just jealous of how happy you are together. And when you get the diagnosis of cancer, you are glad to have him to lean on, and you put the wedding off. That's OK, the time will be better later. In the meantime he moves in, you invite him into your family, and it's true, your parents adore him. So when he shows up at their place, a little too drunk to be out at night, they call you and of course they let him stay over.

