When Life Gives Her Lemons
Emily Su
Is there a word
for when you look in her eyes,
and find yourself
suffocating, clenched
in the wrenching grip
of helplessness?
The sweet, bright air that you’ve held—resting
so sweetly on the tip of your pink tongue—
slowly squeezes out
of your heart
like a lemon exhaling its life,
leaving a dull ache, a shriveled up peel, and a sour aftertaste.
She clings to you.
The tired folds under her eyes
shrivel, curl inward, and
tuck into themselves
like introverted seeds
longing for the return
to a rich, dark soil,
where they could sleep
until the time
for second chances
came again.
You grip her hands fruitlessly back,
her skin punctured
with small holes—lost opportunities and broken
aspirations.
She tells you simple words,
“When life gives you lemons, why make lemonade?
There’s nothing sweet enough
to help the taste.”
And so all you long for now
is to find the magic word
to soothe her pain from the bitter slice
of a harsh life.
Is there a word for that?