“Eating my first peach after knee surgery” by Ekiwah Adler Belendez
This peach is a cool sun.
Stars hang in the dark branches of space
under the sway of gravity
yet still their light travels
into dark distances –
to enter me this time
in the flesh of this peach
firing the synapses of memory
my tongue holds…
I remember the taste of a woman
who brought with her tenderness
a new unidentified species –
flying colonies of peaches.
shimmering and vanishing.
Do I have the right
to keep missing her?
Biting this peach
I know there are places
where I’ve stored juices of our rapid kisses.
Within my porous darkness
there hangs a peach
a bold circumference of light.
The son of a North American father and a Mexican mother, Ekiwah Adler Belendez is the author of five collections of poetry, Soy (I Am); Palabras Inagotables, (Never-ending Words); Weaver (2003), his first book in English; The Coyotes Trace, which features an introduction by Mary Oliver.
I realy like your pomes because they almost make me cry