POETRY December 6, 2024

Pilgrimage Back to an Original Feeling

In the dream you have written me a letter,

but the only word I can read is Until.

This is a connector word, a block placed

in the line between the lead-up and what happened.

This is not your neighborhood anymore.

I’m keeping track of the flowers each week:

the riots of hydrangeas, trees filled with white

clusters of ideas. By the gas station, a mother

lifts up her son to touch the dogwood petals.

On a different day I pass gardenia bushes

and remember the way my stepmother

would take a single bloom and suspend it

in a dish of water that she would leave

in my bedroom. One of my first lessons in beauty.

Or longing. Today I toured a historic home

where each room had a laminated sheet of paper

with no story, just an inventory of the décor,

its sources, the years, the significance. I wanted

a tie that bound it all together, some meaning.

I kept passing mirrors and taking pictures of myself.

I wanted to send them to the man I am in love with,

who says he likes me, who is not mine, my secret.

Until. If he sees me. I keep giving him tests to pass.

Opportunities to prove me right: that something

about him is wrong. Until I’m back here, 

with my cynicism. A tree has fallen into the river 

and the current combs through the branches 

like fingers through hair. At night I wait for fireflies

and bats, feel my mind unspool. Until I’m in bed

again and dream of a baby, a porch swing,

people I used to know who say things I can’t hear. 

Paige Sullivan is a poet, writer, and communications professional living in Atlanta. A graduate of the creative writing programs at Agnes Scott College and Georgia State University, her work has recently appeared in The Journal, Cherry Tree, Southeast Review, The Florida Review, and other journals. In her free time, she volunteers as a tour guide at a very old house and a very old cemetery.
Social media: Instagram @bpaigesullivan; Website www.bpaigesullivan.com