Tag: friendship

  • group chat name: tall ppl only (3) [personal essay]

    Hope is the thing that lasts the longest, and the thing that hurts the most. I say this to my friends at dinner, slurping our way through our favorite Vietnamese place. We talk about relationships and I space out, letting my recent slow-drip heartbreak run down my ribs like dipping sauce.

    We pay for dinner and learn that the owner is from Hà Giang and has lived in Japan for ten years. He shows us Tiktoks of people there dancing, working on fields, passing through the tall green hills and clear rivers. He says every word with so much pride that I picture myself swimming in the jewel-blue rivers feeling the same joy. I think of my hometown with its long grey winter and short summer, how people are happy enough to bake casseroles to keep their hands warm and never see Vietnam. I’m returning to Minnesota in a few weeks and maybe I’ll finally learn to care about tater-tot hotdish.

    We say gochisousama deshita and walk to the Lawson down the block because there’s more to say and it’s chilly. The hot chocolate looks watery, but maybe we’ll get lucky and it’s only a trick of the light. It’s not. We pay and head to the river. One of us finds a good spot far enough away from others and we marvel at how you don’t have to search for things to do in Kyoto. You can always go to the Kamo River and sit, and maybe Trumpet Guy by the bridge figured out how to play this time.

    It’s dark enough to be anonymous. The three of us watch the black river trickle down its thin steps as other friends, couples, bikers, and runners pass behind us. The friend we haven’t seen in months talks about relationships again. There’s a woman waiting for him and he has to tell her not to. My problem is the opposite; I’m waiting for someone and tell myself not to. I wipe a line of hot chocolate from my chin and wonder if things will ever stop dripping.

    I fill him in on the crush I had for months, the one I’ve given up on a few times. He says He’s a great man. What did you like about him? Every time I sip this cocoa, I hope it’s rich and creamy like the kind I make at home, but it’s only sugared water. He seemed so warm and kind, but never let me know him. I don’t say that I’m grateful for the years I spent learning to be funny if only to be the reason he smiles. That’s too serious. If only my jokes wouldn’t catch in my throat.

    We say a quick goodbye and make a plan for our real one, the last time the three of us will be together. The last time we’ll be at our favorite mom-and-pop restaurant in Higashiosaka, the city we became friends in. I walk home, remembering that soon I won’t be able to walk alone at night without a turtle shell of fear at my back.

    Towards the East is a star pattern that looks like a check mark, and underneath it is my home. The tree-lined mountain looks black against the navy blue sky and I look forward to seeing it again in the morning, green and glistening. Can mountains be grateful for the years they spent forming if only to be the reason someone like me has something to worship? I shake what’s left in the bottle and wonder if a soul mate could be a place instead of a person. My head tilts back and I finish what I’m drinking.

  • Friends of Yours

    Good girl good girl
    We have been telling
    You for a while. Take
    A little head pat as
    Cute as third grade.
    We are in the mirror
    With your purple hat
    And pink sweater
    And you have not
    Been touched with
    Tenderness. So
    We squeeze
    Your shoulders like
    A warm sponge.
    We hope today
    You do not look for us.

  • Gone long | Ben

    Travelers always talk about returning home to find that everything’s the same. How odd, they say (I’ve said), that you can experience so much elsewhere and upon opening that front door back home, nothing’s changed except you and your perception.

    Sometimes you’re gone a long time, though, and too much happens. Part of being in the community is physical presence, and you can lose that. And sometimes, before you even return, you know that things are not the same at all.

    Ben

    I call and we catch up
    on video chat. Your friends
    got robbed and 4th of July
    was too loud to hear the
    bonfire, and my roommate
    doesn’t eat vegetables.
    When it’s time to talk
    about our friend, the reason
    I called. Both of us loosen
    our gaze somewhere past
    the phones. He was
    doing so well, too.

  • Moonshine

    In the dark they called me Moonshine.
    That liquor in a glass jar.
    Holy water.

    They baptized me in hogwash
    made in someone’s basement’s rusty sink.

    Moonshine they say.
    Not the boozy white reflection
    on a wrinkled black lake.

    Moonshine.
    Back alleys.
    The kind you shout mistakes at
    Your footsteps echo in the rain
    Someone pees in the corner.

    I could be the summer sunrise
    The painted lake
    Gulls in the sky.
    My own name.
    But I’m stuck as the hooch.

  • Tempe, Arizona

    Tempe, Arizona
    is the Oscars on a blowup bed,
    my dog saying No to the desert mountain,
    mystery mariachi slipping over a wall,
    drinking beer at the movies
    dining at a hot Mexican restaurant and the check
    insisting that friendship is expensive.
    Tempe is the place where you find out
    you are hotdish and your friends are sushi.