we’ve always known each other
our mothers friends from back home
bound into some ancient sisterhood
of grief his mother the only one
who can make my mother laugh
haitham for all his atrocious grades
is at least good at people while i am a solid
b minus in every class & barely scraping
a passing grade in any social interaction
now instead i make my own dejected sandwiches
damp in their paper towels two pieces of untoasted
white bread & between them a single slice
of plasticky american cheese
we never ask why our mothers had come here
& could not let it go though i always beg
for the same crumpled photograph stories of
weddings that went on for weeks cafes crowded
with poets gardens lush & humming
with mosquitoes
maybe named for some unknown dead relative
some dreary ghost so of course no one wants me
at their party their sleepover their after-school
trip to the mall
the choicest or most vital part of some idea or experience
i imagine her yasmeen this other girl bright & alive
mouth full & dripping with language easy in her charm
& in essence she looks like me but of course
better nails unbitten & painted turquoise
haitham calls me a nostalgia monster & likes to laugh
at the dream-brain that takes over mine when i hear
the old songs & run my fingers
over the old photographs
i trip on the carpet’s hem & fall chipping a tiny corner
of my bottom front tooth & in calling my name
in exasperation my mother calls
for the grace i don’t have
Created on Wed Oct 06 10:23:35 EDT 2021
(updated Wed Oct 13 10:36:56 EDT 2021)
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