floating in a tin can
I would like to watch you sleeping, which may not happen. I would like to watch you, sleeping. I would like to sleep with you, to enter your sleep as its smooth dark wave slides over my head

and walk with you through that lucent wavering forest of bluegreen leaves with its watery sun & three moons towards the cave where you must descend, towards your worst fear

I would like to give you the silver branch, the small white flower, the one word that will protect you from the grief at the center of your dream, from the grief at the center I would like to follow you up the long stairway again & become the boat that would row you back carefully, a flame in two cupped hands to where your body lies beside me, and as you enter it as easily as breathing in

I would like to be the air that inhabits you for a moment only. I would like to be that unnoticed
& that necessary.

- margaret atwood

June 2017

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February 13th, 2014


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[info]spaceodyssey

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DAYENU


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[info]spaceodyssey
April 3, 1969
It’s hard for Michael to pay attention to the television; the words sound distant, the images seem inconsequential. It’s not just that he feels fuzzy with wine and food, or exhausted from working all day and staying up late, or distracted by Lee’s sweet-smelling warmth curled up against him. He feels different, in a deep-down way that he can’t ignore. Changed.

He thinks of the way Lee had sounded speaking the familiar Hebrew; of how strangely new the Haggadah he’d bought felt in his hands, and of the memory of choosing it and knowing he had a choice; of the tastes of salt water and horseradish and the charoset Lee had made. There are still candles burning on the table, he can smell them. Lee had gotten so much wine that it’s hardly gone yet. A half-finished glass of his is sitting out (he’d promised her he’d go back for it).

Celebrating Purim without Morris had been strange, but conducting his own seder was something else entirely. He hadn’t realized what was involved until it was happening. He’s not sure he knows the full extent of it even now.

Celebrating Pesach with Lee is also strange. Good, very good—Michael would even say powerful—but strange. He's used to knowing where he stands in relation to Morris's convictions, and there’s a lot about Lee’s Judaism that he doesn’t know and isn't sure how to ask about. But the fact that she agreed to do this with him, well. That's enough for him, here and now.

“Hey,” he murmurs next to her ear. “Thank you.”