Love Poem 36
Old love is one of those things
that always sounds better than it felt
and whose smell we remember being
as fresh as it was the first time we smelled it.
For a moment within a moment
everything clicks in the
perfection of memory.
The old times.
The good days.
The Old Times.
The Good Days
when we kept our selves warm through
skin crushing together
in sweaty throes,
and when the world was
against us
we could press again each other’s back
and we would
empty our lungs
screaming into the void.
We thought about
Sisyphus
and we imagined him happy.
We saw him with purpose,
even in the most purposeless of times.
We never thought about Tantalus.
We never thought about the
less romantic of the condemned.
And that’s old love, isn’t it?
Reaching for that which we need to sustain us
and coming up short by a breath.
And every day that was the case for Tantalus.
Every day stretched for nothing.
Every day tortured by longing.
So, can we imagine him happy?
If he can be happy, can
old love
be something from which we draw happiness?
All the old love,
old pain,
all the old times.
I don’t know if Tantalus can be happy.