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Somewhere Real

Shira Erlichman

December 28, 2020

Get in, George Eliot. I packed PB&Js. I’m bringing that rainbow parachute we held hands under as eight year olds. Get in, right beside Autumn, beside every manic pixie dream girl screenplay written by a man, beside “bad weather,” beside Allegra’s pomegranate split into five uneven offerings, beside Allegra herself, she’s a mother now, as I write this. Get in, television and all the extinct hardware of the nineties. Montel, Jerry, Ricki, get in. I’m driving. Get in, exes. Tell me about life without me, pick the music, thread a threat through my dumb brown hair, something like you were always so then let the rain finish your sentence. Get in rain, but don’t hog the air. I’m running away. I’m tired of not being a monk. Get in, “You’re So Vain,” and five o’clock shadows and how hard it is to not talk to my brother. We went a whole year and a half. Get in, year and a half. Get in, therapist with the good haircut and bad advice. You too, Michael Jackson. I’m so sorry you had to be Michael Jackson. The kind of snow that only fell when I was young, get in. Or maybe it’s just how I saw it, get in. I’m trying desperately not to sound cute, which is, of course, adorable. But, please. Eleven siblings killed in the camps, get in, next to my grandfather. Pillheadedness, get in. Pema Chodron’s forehead and everything behind it, get in. I’m not going to say it again: buckle up, put a daffodil behind my ear, touch my shoulder from the backseat, write my will for me, tell Mary Ann Evans I can hear her humming, it’s fine except it’s driving me nuts. I’m aware that I’m crying, get in, sit next to K. The baffling intelligence of starling and uteri—front seat. I’m only five feet tall, too many strangers pick me up as a gag, my recurring dream is that I choose this life again—keep your hands inside the vehicle. The mandolin I inherited because of genocide, keep me awake all night. Morgan, I just want to watch your hands protect a flame. Everybody, I’m sorry, I’m doing my best not to lean so hard on metaphor I avoid where I am. This road invented itself. Even though I get the facial expressions right, I’m a poor listener, get in. Greasy haired, bucktoothed, gets distracted easily, deodorant stains, secret crush on Kathryn, come on in, throw your book bag out the window and tell me your favorite color. Turquoise, get in. The locker they shoved Gabby into and I didn’t do it, but I didn’t stop them, get in. The line between where you almost went and where you’re going: they call that a fork. Funny. Every time I let the moon roof slide open, but there was no moon, get in, hurry slowly, slow up, slur your worlds, say you’re sor- row, admit you loved the uglier twin while arm-in-arm with the one older by a second. Oh, cherishing, get in, it’s not too late, get in, the diner never closes, get in, put your feet on the dash, I’m stopping at a—I can’t believe they call it this, two commands: Rest! Stop! The game is we rush into the gas station, you buy me a souvenir I most certainly don’t need, and I, you. I found this keychain, it blinks your name, they never have mine, get in. Get in, world, death, time. I swear I’ll turn this car around if you don’t hot box us vapid. The day the stars come down and start walking around like they own the place, God said, I’m quitting, get in. The game is I spy, the game is who can be quiet the longest, the game is hold your breath there’s a cemetery. Order me fries. Order me lungs. Order me around. Order my manuscript. Here’s a handful of pennies, of ketchup packets, of sky. I know you’re exhausted, get in, I’m driving you home. Roll down your window, the forecast is alive. The dog’s kicking in his sleep which means a brain the size of a lemon can squeeze a whole dream. Poor poet, get in, you never could say goodbye with grace. Lucille, get in. Dead family, get in. I want to show you something: I had no map when I started and now here I am, somewhere real called loving you, get in.

Shira Erlichmanis a poet, musician, and visual artist. She is the author of Odes to Lithium and the author-illustrator of Be/Hold: A Friendship Book. Her work has been featured in PBS NewsHour’s Poetry Series, The Seattle Times, and The New York Times, among others.


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