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The Carrying




  ALSO BY ADA LIMÓN

  Lucky Wreck

  This Big Fake World

  Sharks in the Rivers

  Bright Dead Things

  © 2018, Text by Ada Limón

  All rights reserved. Except for brief quotations in critical articles or reviews, no part of this book may be reproduced in any manner without prior written permission from the publisher: Milkweed Editions, 1011 Washington Avenue South, Suite 300, Minneapolis, Minnesota 55415.

  (800) 520-6455

  milkweed.org

  Published 2018 by Milkweed Editions

  Printed in Canada

  Cover design by Mary Austin Speaker

  Cover art by Stacia Brady

  Author photo by Lucas Marquardt

  18 19 20 21 22 5 4 3 2 1

  First Edition

  Milkweed Editions, an independent nonprofit publisher, gratefully acknowledges sustaining support from the Jerome Foundation; the Lindquist & Vennum Foundation; the McKnight Foundation; the National Endowment for the Arts; the Target Foundation; and other generous contributions from foundations, corporations, and individuals. Also, this activity is made possible by the voters of Minnesota through a Minnesota State Arts Board Operating Support grant, thanks to a legislative appropriation from the arts and cultural heritage fund, and a grant from Wells Fargo. For a full listing of Milkweed Editions supporters, please visit milkweed.org.

  Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

  Names: Limón, Ada, author.

  Title: The carrying: poems / Ada Limón.

  Description: First edition. | Minneapolis, Minnesota: Milkweed Editions, 2018. | Includes bibliographical references.

  Identifiers: LCCN 2017061361 (print) | LCCN 2018002212 (ebook) | ISBN 9781571319944 (ebook) | ISBN 9781571315120 (hardcover: acid-free paper)

  Classification: LCC PS3612.I496 (ebook) | LCC PS3612.I496 A6 2018 (print) | DDC 811/.6--dc23

  LC record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2017061361

  Milkweed Editions is committed to ecological stewardship. We strive to align our book production practices with this principle, and to reduce the impact of our operations in the environment. We are a member of the Green Press Initiative, a nonprofit coalition of publishers, manufacturers, and authors working to protect the world’s endangered forests and conserve natural resources. The Carrying was printed on acid-free 100% postconsumer-waste paper by Friesens Corporation.

  For Lucas & Lily Bean

  CONTENTS

  Title Page

  Copyright

  Dedication

  1.

  A Name

  Ancestors

  How Most of the Dreams Go

  The Leash

  Almost Forty

  Trying

  On a Pink Moon

  The Raincoat

  The Vulture & the Body

  American Pharoah

  Dandelion Insomnia

  Dream of the Raven

  The Visitor

  Late Summer after a Panic Attack

  Bust

  Dead Stars

  Dream of Destruction

  Prey

  2.

  The Burying Beetle

  How We Are Made

  The Light the Living See

  The Dead Boy

  What I Want to Remember

  Overpass

  The Millionth Dream of Your Return

  Bald Eagles in a Field

  I’m Sure about Magic

  Wonder Woman

  The Real Reason

  The Year of the Goldfinches

  Notes on the Below

  Sundown & All the Damage Done

  On a Lamppost Long Ago

  Of Roots & Roamers

  Killing Methods

  Full Gallop

  Dream of the Men

  A New National Anthem

  Cargo

  The Contract Says: We’d Like the Conversation to Be Bilingual

  It’s Harder

  3.

  Against Belonging

  Instructions on Not Giving Up

  Would You Rather

  Maybe I’ll Be Another Kind of Mother

  Carrying

  What I Didn’t Know Before

  Mastering

  The Last Thing

  Love Poem with Apologies for My Appearance

  Sway

  Sacred Objects

  Sometimes I Think My Body Leaves a Shape in the Air

  Cannibal Woman

  Wife

  From the Ash inside the Bone

  Time Is On Fire

  After the Fire

  Losing

  The Last Drop

  After His Ex Died

  Sparrow, What Did You Say?

  Notes & Acknowledgments

  About the Author

  She had some horses she loved.

  She had some horses she hated.

  These were the same horses.

  JOY HARJO

  1

  A NAME

  When Eve walked among

  the animals and named them—

  nightingale, red-shouldered hawk,

  fiddler crab, fallow deer—

  I wonder if she ever wanted

  them to speak back, looked into

  their wide wonderful eyes and

  whispered, Name me, name me.

  ANCESTORS

  I’ve come here from the rocks, the bone-like chert,

  obsidian, lava rock. I’ve come here from the trees—

  chestnut, bay laurel, toyon, acacia, redwood, cedar,

  one thousand oaks

  that bend with moss and old-man’s beard.

  I was born on a green couch on Carriger Road between

  the vineyards and the horse pasture.

  I don’t remember what I first saw, the brick of light

  that unhinged me from the beginning. I don’t remember

  my brother’s face, my mother, my father.

  Later, I remember leaves, through car windows,

  through bedroom windows, through the classroom window,

  the way they shaded and patterned the ground, all that

  power from roots. Imagine you must survive

  without running? I’ve come from the lacing patterns of leaves,

  I do not know where else I belong.

  HOW MOST OF THE DREAMS GO

  First, it’s a fawn dog, and then

  it’s a baby. I’m helping him

  to swim in a thermal pool,

  the water is black as coffee,

  the cement edges are steep

  so to sink would be easy

  and final. I ask the dog

  (that is also the child),

  Is it okay that I want

  you to be my best friend?

  And the child nods.

  (And the dog nods.)

  Sometimes, he drowns.

  Sometimes, we drown together.

  THE LEASH

  After the birthing of bombs of forks and fear,

  the frantic automatic weapons unleashed,

  the spray of bullets into a crowd holding hands,

  that brute sky opening in a slate-metal maw

  that swallows only the unsayable in each of us, what’s

  left? Even the hidden nowhere river is poisoned

  orange and acidic by a coal mine. How can

  you not fear humanity, want to lick the creek

  bottom dry, to suck the deadly water up into

  your own lungs, like venom? Reader, I want to

  say: Don’t die. Even when silvery fish after fish

  comes back belly up, and the country plummets

  into a crepitating crater of hatred, isn’t there still

  something singing? The truth is: I don’t know.
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  But sometimes I swear I hear it, the wound closing

  like a rusted-over garage door, and I can still move

  my living limbs into the world without too much

  pain, can still marvel at how the dog runs straight

  toward the pickup trucks breaknecking down

  the road, because she thinks she loves them,

  because she’s sure, without a doubt, that the loud

  roaring things will love her back, her soft small self

  alive with desire to share her goddamn enthusiasm,

  until I yank the leash back to save her because

  I want her to survive forever. Don’t die, I say,

  and we decide to walk for a bit longer, starlings

  high and fevered above us, winter coming to lay

  her cold corpse down upon this little plot of earth.

  Perhaps we are always hurtling our bodies toward

  the thing that will obliterate us, begging for love

  from the speeding passage of time, and so maybe,

  like the dog obedient at my heels, we can walk together

  peacefully, at least until the next truck comes.

  ALMOST FORTY

  The birds were being so bizarre today,

  we stood static and listened to them insane

  in their winter shock of sweet gum and ash.

  We swallow what we won’t say: Maybe

  it’s a warning. Maybe they’re screaming

  for us to take cover. Inside, your father

  seems angry, and the soup’s grown cold

  on the stove. I’ve never been someone

  to wish for too much, but now I say,

  I want to live a long time. You look up

  from your work and nod. Yes, but

  in good health. We turn up the stove

  again and eat what we’ve made together,

  each bite an ordinary weapon we wield

  against the shrinking of mouths.

  TRYING

  I’d forgotten how much

  I like to grow things, I shout

  to him as he passes me to paint

  the basement. I’m trellising

  the tomatoes in what’s called

  a Florida weave. Later, we try

  to knock me up again. We do it

  in the guest room because that’s

  the extent of our adventurism

  in a week of violence in Florida

  and France. Afterward,

  the sun still strong though lowering

  inevitably to the horizon, I check

  on the plants in the back, my

  fingers smelling of sex and tomato

  vines. Even now, I don’t know much

  about happiness. I still worry

  and want an endless stream of more,

  but some days I can see the point

  in growing something, even if

  it’s just to say I cared enough.

  ON A PINK MOON

  I take out my anger

  And lay its shadow

  On the stone I rolled

  Over what broke me.

  I plant three seeds

  As a spell. One

  For what will grow

  Like air around us,

  One for what will

  Nourish and feed,

  One for what will

  Cling and remind me—

  We are the weeds.

  THE RAINCOAT

  When the doctor suggested surgery

  and a brace for all my youngest years,

  my parents scrambled to take me

  to massage therapy, deep tissue work,

  osteopathy, and soon my crooked spine

  unspooled a bit, I could breathe again,

  and move more in a body unclouded

  by pain. My mom would tell me to sing

  songs to her the whole forty-five-minute

  drive to Middle Two Rock Road and forty-

  five minutes back from physical therapy.

  She’d say that even my voice sounded unfettered

  by my spine afterward. So I sang and sang,

  because I thought she liked it. I never

  asked her what she gave up to drive me,

  or how her day was before this chore. Today,

  at her age, I was driving myself home from yet

  another spine appointment, singing along

  to some maudlin but solid song on the radio,

  and I saw a mom take her raincoat off

  and give it to her young daughter when

  a storm took over the afternoon. My god,

  I thought, my whole life I’ve been under her

  raincoat thinking it was somehow a marvel

  that I never got wet.

  THE VULTURE & THE BODY

  On my way to the fertility clinic,

  I pass five dead animals.

  First a raccoon with all four paws to the sky

  like he’s going to catch whatever bullshit load

  falls on him next.

  Then, a grown coyote, his golden furred body soft against the white

  cement lip of the traffic barrier. Trickster no longer,

  an eye closed to what’s coming.

  Close to the water tower that says “Florence, Y’all,” which means

  I’m near Cincinnati, but still in the bluegrass state,

  and close to my exit, I see

  three dead deer, all staggered but together, and I realize as I speed

  past in my death machine that they are a family. I say something

  to myself that’s between a prayer and a curse—how dare we live

  on this earth.

  I want to tell my doctor about how we all hold a duality

  in our minds: futures entirely different, footloose or forged.

  I want to tell him how lately, it’s enough to be reminded that my

  body is not just my body, but that I’m made of old stars and so’s he,

  and that last Tuesday,

  I sat alone in the car by the post office and just was

  for a whole hour, no one knowing how to find me, until

  I got out, the sound of the car door shutting like a gun,

  and mailed letters, all of them saying, Thank you.

  But in the clinic, the sonogram wand showing my follicles, he asks

  if I have any questions, and says, Things are getting exciting.

  I want to say, But what about all the dead animals?

  But he goes quicksilver, and I’m left to pull my panties up like a big girl.

  Some days there is a violent sister inside of me, and a red ladder

  that wants to go elsewhere.

  I drive home on the other side of the road, going south now.

  The white coat has said I’m ready, and I watch as a vulture

  crosses over me, heading toward

  the carcasses I haven’t properly mourned or even forgiven.

  What if, instead of carrying

  a child, I am supposed to carry grief?

  The great black scavenger flies parallel now, each of us speeding,

  intently and driven, toward what we’ve been taught to do with death.

  AMERICAN PHAROAH

  Despite the morning’s gray static of rain,

  we drive to Churchill Downs at 6 a.m.,

  eyes still swollen shut with sleep. I say,

  Remember when I used to think everything

  was getting better and better? Now I think

  it’s just getting worse and worse. I know it’s not

  what I’m supposed to say as we machine our

  way through the silent seventy minutes on 64

  over potholes still oozing from the winter’s

  wreckage. I’m tired. I’ve had vertigo for five

  months and on my first day home, he’s shaken

  me awake to see this horse not even race, but

  work. He gives me his jacket as we face

 
the deluge from car to the Twin Spire turnstiles,

  and once deep in the fern-green grandstands I see

  the crowd. A few hundred maybe, black umbrellas,

  cameras, and notepads, wet-winged eager early birds

  come to see this Kentucky-bred bay colt with his

  chewed-off tail train to end the almost forty-year

  American Triple Crown drought. A man next to us,

  some horse racing bigwig, hisses a list of reasons

  why this horse—his speed-heavy pedigree, muscle

  and bone recovery, etcetera etcetera could never