One Good Thing
is how fascia unwinds like a loosening vise. Hand to my belly, I know where the tissues want me to go and I follow; I wasn’t born to lead. I once answered a call from a man I thought was my dad’s friend, Brian. What are you wearing, Brian asked and I told him: denim shorts and a t-shirt. A ring of dolphins circling the Earth. SAVE THE PLANET printed on the back. Brian said that made him hard. Brian said now he’s touching himself. Brian said, no, he didn’t need to talk to my dad. I let these memories gather inside me—a thousand beginnings and middles in search of an end, winding like muscle fibers from a too-quickly turned head, a small knot where the neck meets the shoulder. Press it and a hot spark will travel down my spine. Press it and I’ll show you how to breathe through the pain. Didn’t you know I was born electric? A live wire. An old-fashioned fuse box. Someday I’ll be ash and you won’t know where to spread me. Save a bit for the man on the corner who likes to call me baby, a little pinch for the tip of his tongue—let him finally have a taste of me.