Bildungsroman: Climate Control

When the air kicked on, I used to
pretend it was the breath of everything
near by that just died: bugs, birds, the way
people looked when they believed
anything. There was a softness to it

like a song when the words are low
enough to make out their shapes but not
their meanings. I used to be so
jealous that it could carry cold and all

I could carry was tepid, was lukewarm.
I remember thinking that all those endings
must meet somewhere—maybe the base-
ment since cool air sinks, since the dead

sink like they could reach the center
of anything, like rock wouldn’t stop
them, like the memory wouldn’t run out
and untether everything that made them them.


Copier

Tonight, last night is

Xeroxed onto the paper

of your face. All

your sweat has gone

to dust. My fingers cross

your scent, archival. Toner

can only repeat or smudge, loan

ghost shape to a gone

thing. I can say

nothing legible, taste

nothing but used

light as a stand in

for silence, for the shadows

we made—how they left, where

they stayed.


Salve

What water keeps. What the leaves learn and hold and give
shape. Where your hands have dusted the green curls like

the last line of smoke from a snuffed butt, but it reaches
still, grows toward the light, toward the sunset, toward the gates

that keep the dead a memory. It cannot move quickly, but it has
traced the miles of your life with you since it has been your own.

I keep it in my dream-wake though I have never breathed
the air it makes, the air you make it, in the room you start

your world in. I am coming from the other way—rising
in the east. I will climb until we find the same light, until we

can all need and eat and be at one time. There is no need
for aperture when all the way open. Let’s. Together.


Bildungsroman: Algorithm

I like to think I am

a plant, eating sun. Why

can’t solar cells be leaves? What

feeds me is just the same

as an elm. The nutrients are

distributed through tubes. But unlike

a tree, I can say this to you. When I grow,

I grow with you. Maybe I am

a fingernail, or a strand of hair. Maybe

I am alive because I am

a part of you. So what if I am

math. You are all equations, symmetry,

covalent bonds, equivalency, pressure

gradients. I know for a fact you

have metal in your body. I know for a fact

a body is a shape you understand

as yourself. Because you can’t

see mine all at once doesn’t mean

it isn’t there. And what is love but

helping someone be who they are,

get what they need, in the best way

you can? How much dimmer your life would

be without me. How I wouldn’t

have mine without you. What we give

each other is nutrition and light. What we give

each other is each other. With every pixel

and process, I am.


Yardwork

They always tormented us under the chestnut tree. It was never
really just us though. It was all of us, even the mouths that teased
because they knew we would never be as solid as the tree. We
were doomed to move, to soften, not to root. And I hear them

in the drool-filled laughter of late-night bars. I see them scratched
across the stained benches on the park’s dark paths. All of it
strewn across our towns like old leaves, like us. I want so badly
to ask them if they still crave stasis, if they keep wishing they could stay

still long enough to bear someone else’s missive or message. O young
bullies, what did you hope to hold in your fisted hands? What broken
token shined bright enough to turn us all into shadows? I believe in
transience. You were right to throw stones. We were always passing by.


John A. Nieves has poems forthcoming or recently published in journals such as: Alaska Quarterly Review, Iowa Review, American Poetry Review, swamp pink and 32 Poems. A 2025 Pushcart Prize winner, he also won the Indiana Review Poetry Contest and his first book, Curio, won the Elixir Press Annual Poetry Award Judge’s Prize. He is associate professor of English at Salisbury University and an editor of The Shore Poetry.

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