Rusty Morrison
When 4 am dark is narrow, I feel it before
I leave the bed. I pull the narrow into my
thighs, walk out of the house, up the steep
hill of the Arlington. I am sure to wear my
glasses, so I’ll see the sharp, narrow lights
far above me succeed in breaking through
night-sky’s dark. I need the narrow, now,
in my fingers as I type. I learned it
decades ago, when I started shooting
meth—draw back my thumb at the angle
to balance a syringe’s small circular top
on my thumbnail as I pull the correct
dosage of liquid into the syringe, and then
feel what I thought was the exacting
precision of a changeless certainty. It
wasn’t. But the skill of narrow precision—
all that I’ve taken with me from my year
of shooting meth. I feel it in my thighs on
this early-morning walk. In each foot’s
impact on pavement, risking wherever
precision leads—this morning I step into
fear. I draw that into the stride, trusting
the rhythm of this instant of walking, no
matter how it might change the next
instant, change me, change where this
might lead. Last night, I needed to narrow
my eyes as I read the new poem Cassie
sent me. So few words on a line. Not
forcing a line’s meaning to come any
sooner than it might have come to her,
come for her, as she typed, come for me,
now, as I read for the narrower passage
within the meaning to take me farther
than I knew I’d had the courage for. My
left foot first—this has become an
obsession of starting out the door in the
morning, a form of reliability, a ritual, that
I allow to be as frighteningly necessary as
the ritual of my childhood, wearing the bit
of white lace on my head required for a
Catholic girl going into church, even when
mass wasn’t in session, when no others
were in the pews. Once, the lace slipped,
fell to the church floor. My sharp intake of
breath, so loud that a nun sitting in a pew
praying looked up. Such shock on her
face—not because the lace fell, I realized,
but for the look she saw on mine. What
had she seen there? I’m drawing into my
thighs that unknowable expression I
wore, which remains mine, as I look to the
top of the hill where the Arlington turns.
I’m filling my lungs, my blood, with that
look, which narrows as it gains force—
what has always been fear and, more than
fear, awareness that nothing can protect
me from whatever might come. I draw
that in. Langer says, look for any
expression and, whatever expression you
are seeking, you will find. At my front
door, I notice and reach down to pick up
the Monday morning New York Times
where it rests this morning in its blue
plastic wrapper, and I feel everything is a
symptom of the expression I am seeking. I
pick up the news and I step inside.
from the journal OVERSOUND
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