Photo by sophie & cie via Flickr

Listen:

All my life I’ve shown up late.
             But when I do, I compensate

for my delay — I laugh and preen and carry on
             as if I had been present all along.

I stayed in utero, for instance, two
             weeks after I was due,

then came out so decisively and fast
             I couldn’t breathe. I spent my first

night on earth alone inside a tent
             flushed full of oxygen, the event

from which (my dad believes)
             have sprung like fires all my weird anxieties.

Mostly I can’t see myself at all
             until I sense in someone else a parallel,

like how I only realize what
             I want at the moment I attain it,

my mind the final part of me to know.
             I’ve hurt people I love being so

late to my desires. Last year, I met someone I thought
             I couldn’t live without, and in the process lost

another, without whom I thought I’d
             die. If I had only realized

sooner, etc., etc. But I handled things ineptly
             and he left. I didn’t die. Instead, I went to therapy

and saw the stegosaur uptown, stayed with friends
             and drank a lot of tea. Even then,

riding the bus to visit my new lover,
             I was breathless always, early almost never.

Excerpted from COUPLETS: A Love Story by Maggie Millner. Published by Farrar, Straus
and Giroux. Copyright © 2023 by Maggie Millner. All rights reserved.

Maggie Millner

Maggie Millner is the author of Couplets (forthcoming from FSG in February 2023). Her poems have appeared in The New Yorker, The Paris Review, The Nation, BOMB, the Kenyon Review, Poetry, and elsewhere. She is currently a senior editor at The Yale Review and a lecturer in writing at Yale.