April 16, 2020
364: Leaving the University Gym
April 16, 2020
364: Leaving the University Gym
Leaving the University Gym
by Sasha Pimentel
not understanding how we celebrate Our bodies. Every day we separate. — Marilyn Hacker September, and the great stillness of moonless night and cooling air, the city in blue pockets in the hills, and just under your hands, the current of what’s forgotten. All week long, while you were running, or reading, your forefinger blurring the type, one season was slipping into another, as lovers weave themselves across a bed, odor of yeast from the beer bread lifting through the oven, the dog’s pad cracked, and in class, you were watching one student blink at another. There’s a time to believe in love, you’d thought, watching her rub her arm hair, and him shift in his shirt, but then you believe all things end, and you’d tried so carefully to explain what Marilyn Hacker meant, how we “wake to ourselves, exhausted, in the late,” before you thought better about it, staring down the rows, and cited the fused limbs, and raised unlettered power instead, the poem’s words comets’ tails on blackboard. Now, you are finally leaving campus, content this time your heart has bettered the howl for sugar, your body hot from the work of itself, when you push through the glass door into fall— and you remember a draft which was just like this once, when, past the dorm curfew, Tim was clutching your elbows beside a lake, the air cricket -thick, Cassiopeia encrusted in her collar. There is no loneliness as knowing. Years later, when you were drunk yet again, at Le Lido, swimming the booth, the waiter—cloudy in his captain’s suit—sat with you. The gold-enameled dancer was still mounting her white horse. He poured the champagne. You sipped it softly. Their muscles erupted into the shivering other as they strutted circles against the stage, animal and woman, and you were grateful no one said a word. How could you have named the chill of her breasts, the terrible hot fur? It was that gift of silence which happens between strangers, out of country. Then you’d walked home, tall cathedrals bristling in the baubles of their unrung bells. You’d turned your collar up against the coming cold as you turn up your jacket now, surprised by the suddenness of the season (or your own inattention to the small shifts), your breath crystal in air— and each stripe, marking separation down the asphalt, is lamped and glistening, eerie as snow, solstice certain as the short drive ahead, to when you must walk up to your dark, quiet house, sink your key into the lock.
"Leaving the University Gym," by Sasha Pimentel, from FOR WANT OF WATER by Sasha Pimentel, copyright © 2017 Beacon Press. Used by permission of Beacon Press.