Thomas Wolfe, a famous Southern American writer who lived in the first half of the twentieth century (and matriculated at the University of North Carolina here in Chapel Hill), was the one who famously said, "You can't go home again". While this may not be true for everyone, for many of us this is, indeed, the case.
Nowhere
I spent 18 summers in a town
on the Mississippi:
and as many winters,
springs and falls.
I have been away
longer than I ever lived there,
and now it feels like I have no past,
no roots,
no memories entwined
with the metallic taste
of that earth,
the sound of those birds singing,
the look of sunsets over that house.
the people who shared that house with me,
and laughter and tears,
and all of my DNA.
they are more strangers to me today
than ever.
18 years (and more)
of shared history,
biology, roots,
and to what end?
with each passing season—
living my own life
living out of my own self and
my own identity—
I leave those fellow travelers further behind.
the idiom, the shared language
we used to communicate is now no longer enough.
the common ground that gave our experiences meaning
has shrunk to a small, unkempt, and neglected
old rose garden.
the once vigorous bushes, that sadly produced
so few fragrant and surprising blossoms,
are old and gnarled,
hanging on more out of habit
than necessity.
they exhausted their precious
and limited resources years ago;
no one can remember when last
they produced a flower, even a stunted
and disease-warped exemplar of something
we know from other accounts
can be magnificent.
and so this lineage will end with me.
sometimes it feels as if I am the last of my line
still alive, though this
is hardly the case.
the last creative impulse this pedigree produced
was the absolute necessity of escape,
a severing of the bonds encircling
me like vines,
overly luxuriant, threatening to choke
the life out of me.
I am not yet ready to capitulate to the grim
conclusion of this farcical saga.
the spirit of rebellion (or at least self-preservation)
awoke in me a warrior’s fierceness
to protect the precious life put in my charge
by some intelligence greater than my own.
to live, I had to die,
cut myself adrift,,
construct a raft out of different dreams, choose another purpose for my life,
and reset my compass to keep my always
pointed toward my own true north.
In Memoriam Leslie Cheung 1956-2003 Our Leslie, beautiful like a flower. I love you today and always-- a part of my heart beats for you alone, tonight a