At the beginning there was a man in the doorway
blue shirt, and a grin —
curls that verged on Bob Ross.
Do you know a different way to meet new people?
Each of us standing on the threshold,
feet moving towards each other, strangers then.
Good thing I know now that he loves me, cannot view this moment
without that filter,
his body already known, the ache of it.
In that moment I was terrified —
Jacob Jans, I heard him say. Later a friend told me You
know that’s the name of a terrible superhero, right?
Let us pretend that we can chose love based on names, on
predetermined conditions,
maybe I should have waited for someone that clicked the boxes
Canadian and Christian.
No, not even in jest.
One friend chose a husband because he was less intelligent than her.
They are still together,
probably. We should
quit pretending we know what love looks like till we find it —
reedy and tough — the scariest experience I’ve ever had,
seriously, was to step into marriage, planting a ginkgo
tree on a hillside full of evergreen, and pledging myself to an
unknown future, with a known quantity. Love isn’t
Valentines’ roses, and mood lighting. There’s no destination with
commitment.
x doesn’t mark the spot where you finish, or even the spot where you
start.
y is a known variable, but nothing else is, even in the
zzzzzzzz of sleep.
Abecedarian Written Under the Influence of Anniversary
Caitlin Thomson’s work has appeared in numerous anthologies and literary journals including: The Adroit Journal, The Penn Review, Barrow Street, Wraparound South, and Radar Poetry. A big believer in writing challenges, she has participated in and completed The 3-Day Novel Contest, NaNoWriMo, and NaPoWriMo multiple times, and is the founder of The Poetry Marathon. You can learn more about her writing at www.caitlinthomson.com.