Jeff Whitney
“Give Him His Glasses, He Can’t See Without His Glasses”
In God Class we made two lists: Reasons People Should and Reasons They Shouldn’t. It was a good start, but aren’t there also reasons people do, reasons people don’t? Anyway, I left God Class more or less the same just my hat fit differently filled as I was with dread and longing, the peanut butter and jelly of the godly. Time passed. For a while I worked on an ADHD study, making lists of emotions participants felt watching scenes from the saddest film of my childhood. I watched as they watched different categories of moment—two children riding bikes, having a first kiss—and maybe you know the details of the sad scene already— the bees, the dead child—if you recognize the title. So God can also say Farewell, the pterodactyl. Hello, humming strange. There are two scientists we each have descending in a submarine barely bigger than their bodies, weightless as Macaulay Culkin and Anna Chlumsky before bees came and ruined everything. Here are two more lists: Things I Lost and Things I Kept The Day I Left Home. I spent hours looking for a thing I won’t name my brother gave me. Instead I found Liberté, Egalité, Fraternité, three frogs in a field, named because I couldn’t remember the names of the three musketeers, the three amigos, the Ninja Turtles excluding Donatello, my brother’s least favorite, because already the world was splitting into too many lists. Now we’re on other sides of god’s eyeball and I’m here wondering how we get where we’re going, and if it’s enough, throwing my blue ball against a wall like a god with no mother, or mother with no god, another thing there is no alphabet for, each passing cloud an animal to say bye to. Three frogs at the periphery of my history. They could be anything. Death, say, or death in the Tarot sense, which is change. Which, yes, is also death. They’re joined by all the others who’ve left. The woman I loved but couldn’t tell. That stranger in Spain who approached and said he’d take me to heaven. Heaven! How did I say no? He said, friend, I give to you a grand opportunity.
Jeff Whitney’s most recent chapbook is Sixteen Stories (Flume Press, 2022). Recent poems can be found or found soon in The Adroit Journal, Bennington Review, The Kenyon Review, The Missouri Review, Pleiades, Poetry Northwest, and Sixth Finch. He lives with his wife in Portland.
