Keetje Kuipers
The Oar
All adventurers have contingency plans.
Say a man chooses the sea, wants to feel the wind
curl under his coat sleeves, wants salt
in his eyes, wants deep swells he can ride
like his own unbroken pony.
But he’s afraid
of the bottomless: someday it might pull him under,
tumble his bones into rocks for polishing,
split his belly like a seed bag of pearls.
It’s happened before.
So he’ll clutch
at what he can in the moment of his wreck—
a board, a box, an oar—wrap his body around
its single thin hip, cling haplessly
to the merciful object
that floats.
But when a man tells you this in bed after he’s had his very
last drink, are you the oar? Or is it the drink?
As if one is less an act of desperation
than
the other.
Who knows what his name might become in the morning:
drowned, lost, pulled from the waves.
Staying afloat isn’t a plan, isn’t any
kind of
rescue.
Even you, in his arms, have to try not to be afraid.
Keetje Kuipers
Keetje Kuipers has been the Margery Davis Boyden Wilderness Writing Resident, a Wallace Stegner Fellow at Stanford University, and the Emerging Writer Lecturer at Gettysburg College. Her first book, Beautiful in the Mouth, won the A. Poulin, Jr. Prize from BOA Editions and was published in 2010. Her second book, The Keys to the Jail, is forthcoming in 2013. Keetje is an Assistant Professor at Auburn University.