I Write About People I Don’t Know
I wrote about you and what I’ve experienced through you. So little, seeming like a lot, so I wrote thinking I knew. I didn’t.
By Mariam Zaher
I wrote about you after our first conversation. I wrote about you before I even knew you. I looked at you thinking I was looking through you- thinking that I knew you, so I wrote about you, to you.
I wrote about you and what I’ve experienced through you. So little, seeming like a lot, so I wrote thinking I knew. I didn’t.
I wrote and when I was finished, I stepped back, looked at what I wrote and then at you. I did not know you. The shells, I knew- you, not so much.
I wrote about you because I thought I knew you. Too soon, I know, but my hasty self does not learn from past-haste.
Maybe I wrote because I did want to know you so soon. Knowing you is something I want but will not want to have. I wanted that intimacy of writing about each other; the intimacy you shared with the “her” you wrote about. I wanted to share something with you and time was not there, so instead I wrote for closeness.
I wrote you into a poem that had expectations between every verse because I wanted so bad of you to become the verse in the poem that I later fell for. I wanted you to be what I thought you were.
I love that poem but it’s untrue.
That counts 7 untrue poems on my shelf. 7 silent fallings, 7 painless crashes. You don’t break when you fall for words. Especially when those words end up being a concoction of your own inability to wait.
I wrote about you to spare myself your truth. Here you were and here I was, rushing to preserve the good in you and painting the rest of the picture myself to have the only “you” I wanted for myself. Not you; “you”.
I wrote about you because my words are gentler than you’ll ever be to me. The untrue poems know…