My dead entered the dream single file and they formed a circle around me. Not sure if that was the dream or is the dream of the dream as I write. Do they remember me? I wondered, as one does about the demented. How close are dementia and death, or death and my dream? The dead are relatives, til we become them, dissolved.
Dissolved into solution, where solution is liquid, not a fix. To solve for X means Y is but a pedestrian on the equation’s sidewalk. A pedestrian sees not what is there, but what has heretofore not been seen. The backwards puddle reflection works, but only once each time. Impermanence is cloud, is cloud dissolved.
There are stories, but I don’t want to tell them. Gestures will have to do, the sweep of an arm we make over piano keys when sound isn’t enough. Wings of the egret above a scene of mowing. What a therapist of egrets couldn’t find there, the switch from cow to machine, from meadow to lawn. Does an egret dream of worms, of roaches, of men on mowers?
The dream went nowhere. There was the circle, and I was in it. There were the dead and I, asleep. The scene, such as it was, felt neutral, unadorned. Do my dead recognize each other through me, or must I introduce them, as I would at a meeting?
In another dream, my father disappeared. He hadn’t died, he had simply moved, leaving no address, no phone number. He stayed as the idea of my father rather than as a man in a dapper sport coat, preparing to leave for dinner. I don’t remember seeing him among my dead; all the dead have lost focus, been redacted. Like victims, they’re protected from their names and faces.
Or like the predators, whose names are too big to fail. Structures, also, dissolve, and in their place, an empty plaque. No memorial where none intended. Death starts as memory, ends as erasure. Red smudge where Y took the place of X and was corrected.
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