I Want to Die
                        
                            By Tariq Luthun
                        
                    
                
                                                                
                            in the arms of everyone who’s ever loved me, each
 appendage a tendril expanding into the ether
 of every moment I am leaving behind. Know this: I have dabbled
 in the enterprise of affection; cut my teeth on what it means
 to hold and be held. Behold: everything that has ever been
 labeled “mine” was stolen.
 From me, but also now by me. The land:
 from us, and now the land
 we were stolen to. I belong to nothing
 but my friends—those who have entrusted me
 with the gift of caring for them. For years, I trained myself
 to not feel for anything to spare myself of having to feel
 for everything: no partner, no child; my parents will
 soon be gone too. Can you blame me? I watched men
 and women say things they don’t mean and claim lives
 from bodies they won’t ever eat. Some can’t stomach
 culling the protein from a fly, but drop before the silhouette
 of a gun. Have you ever fallen for something empty
 as a word? For me, it was  joy—the way it bounces
 when spoken. For years, I would whisper it hopelessly
 to the moon. I thought nothing of it
 until I found myself brave enough to chant before the sun—
 it was in this light that I came to find
 my peoples. I took shape among them:
 Joy. Joy. Joy—what a lovely thing
 to feel. But, then again, the word
 doom exists—sometimes
 it’s almost too fun not to say. Apocalypse.
 Even cicada sounds lovely
 with the right inflection. I wonder if
 it’s stronger to nestle into the chest
 of one’s sadness, or to lie about it.
 Once, as a child, I spent a late summer night poking holes
 into the window mesh that shielded us
 against the bugs we had stolen
 away from. Each puncture
 a compromise with those creatures
 seeking refuge. As I did it, I repeated the syllables:
 sim-muh-nim, sim-muh-nim
 caught between cinnamon and synonym. Letting each letter
 pass through until the end of the word. I imagine that
 when this world ends, it will happen like a boy
 yearning to be released from a warm room—
 little by little, not all at once; unbothered
 by the thought of  losing his place.
                
                    
                        Notes:
                        
            
                        
                                                
                                                                    
                            Audio version performed by the author.
                    
                        Source:
                        Poetry
                                                                                                                                                                    (November 2022)