Poem-a-Day - "Object Permanence" by Hala Alyan

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January 8, 2021  

Object Permanence


Hala Alyan

This neighborhood was mine first. I walked each block twice:
drunk, then sober. I lived every day with legs and headphones.
It had snowed the night I ran down Lorimer and swore I’d stop
at nothing. My love, he had died. What was I supposed to do?
I regret nothing. Sometimes I feel washed up as paper. You’re
three years away. But then I dance down Graham and
the trees are the color of champagne and I remember—
There are things I like about heartbreak, too, how it needs
a good soundtrack. The way I catch a man’s gaze on the L
and don’t look away first. Losing something is just revising it.
After this love there will be more love. My body rising from a nest
of sheets to pick up a stranger’s MetroCard. I regret nothing.
Not the bar across the street from my apartment; I was still late.
Not the shared bathroom in Barcelona, not the red-eyes, not
the songs about black coats and Omaha. I lie about everything
but not this. You were every streetlamp that winter. You held
the crown of my head and for once I won’t show you what
I’ve made. I regret nothing. Your mother and your Maine.
Your wet hair in my lap after that first shower. The clinic
and how I cried for a week afterwards. How we never chose
the language we spoke. You wrote me a single poem and in it
you were the dog and I the fire. Remember the courthouse?
The anniversary song. Those goddamn Kmart towels. I loved them,
when did we throw them away? Tomorrow I’ll write down
everything we’ve done to each other and fill the bathtub
with water. I’ll burn each piece of paper down to silt.
And if it doesn’t work, I’ll do it again. And again and again and—

Copyright © 2021 by Hala Alyan. Originally published in Poem-a-Day on January 8, 2021, by the Academy of American Poets.

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“I wrote this poem in the middle of the night after waking up from a dream about forgetting. It was a tender week for me, and I was thinking a lot about love and how it evolves, how there’s never a way to ‘go back’ to something, but rather integrate it into your memory and face ahead. I think I started writing the first lines in the dream.”
Hala Alyan

Hala Alyan is the author of four poetry books and a debut novel, Salt Houses (Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 2017). She is a clinical psychologist, and teaches creative writing and psychology at New York University. She lives in Brooklyn.

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Thanks to Fatimah Asghar, author of If They Come For Us (One World/ Random House, 2018), who curated Poem-a-Day for this month’s weekdays. Read a Q&A about Asghar’s curatorial approach and find out more about our guest editors for the year
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