Regret nothing. Not the cruel novels you read
to the end just to find out who killed the cook, not
the insipid movies that made you cry in the dark,
in spite of your intelligence, your sophistication, not
the lover you left quivering in a hotel parking lot,
the one you beat to the punch line, the door or the one
who left you in your red dress and shoes, the ones
that crimped your toes, don’t regret those.
Not the nights you called god names and cursed
your mother, sunk like a dog in the living room couch,
chewing your nails and crushed by loneliness.
You were meant to inhale those smoky nights
over a bottle of flat beer, to sweep stuck onion rings
across the dirty restaurant floor, to wear the frayed
coat with its loose buttons, its pockets full of struck matches.
You’ve walked those streets a thousand times and still
you end up here. Regret none of it, not one
of the wasted days you wanted to know nothing,
when the lights from the carnival rides
were the only stars you believed in, loving them
for their uselessness, not wanting to be saved.
You’ve traveled this far on the back of every mistake,
ridden in dark-eyed and morose but calm as a house
after the TV set has been pitched out the window.
Harmless as a broken ax. Emptied of expectation.
Relax. Don’t bother remembering any of it. Let’s stop here,
under the lit sign on the corner, and watch all the people walk by.
Every day there’s something old
to feel sorry about—
what I should have done and didn’t,
or what I did, and kept on doing.
I want to believe
everyone’s forgotten by now.
Then I picture them thinking back.
And those who’ve died
and earned the wisdom death allows
just shake their heads and sigh.
“Very funny,” my father would say
after my sister and I played
some cruel little joke on him.
“Ha, ha,” he’d add,
to let us know he got the point.
We want to forget
until we start to forget.
We want the past to change,
and we want it back.
“Enough is enough,”
my father used to say
to tell us it was over.
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