"The Beginning" and "Winter in Fox Point" by Jane Freiman

The Beginning

The beginning is just beginning 
to color. The edges turn golden 
brown. I feel myself ripening in 
the little room with the curtains. 

Outside, at the rickety table, 
the air becomes thinner, cooler. 
Knowing and not knowing—both 
are devastating effects of the way 
we choose to live. 

At the beach, the kindly 
uncle says to the shivering child, 
“We’re gonna warm you up 
like toast on butter.” The tulips at the 
tulip garden have names like “Secret 
Perfume” and “Red Magic.” 

There is a sound of geese flying 
overhead and grandpa says, 
“Oh. Change of seasons.” I scrunch 
my knees up to my chest and 
balance my laptop there. 

Outside, the rickety table. The sound 
of cicadas droning. The milkman 
is never late. In tracing the edges of my face, 
I find that everything is always in flux.
On the other hand, the sense of
knowing is devastating. 

Winter in Fox Point 

I am in my slushy city 
flaunting my dexterity 
on ice for people in cars 
who don’t care. 

My ass looks good 
in these pants I bought
from a girl who doesn’t like me.
My arms are tired 
from carrying this bleach 
to take care of 
the mildew above my bed. 

I am waiting for two packages. 
One is a love letter from a boy 
who I dumped two weeks ago. 
The other is an indescribably bad outfit
I bought to take pictures in. 

Nothing is not worth a description
but my ears are cold and 
there is a strange smell and 
I want to make this tomato sauce

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Jane Freiman is a writer, oral historian, and archives practitioner based in Cambridge, MA. Her work has been featured or is forthcoming in the Brooklyn Rail, The College Hill Independent, Clerestory Journal of the Arts, and Syntax Magazine.