My Enemy (December 12th, 2024, New York, NY)

 

My enemy

Is not like you or me.

Savage that he is—

He is no man

Of flesh and blood

Who can be shot from a distance.

He is no man

With loves and dreams,

A mortgage, or a fantastic collection

Of stamps.

 

No, my enemy

Is a white balloon,

Filled with lukewarm sugar-water

And red dye #4.

At first, his face

Is playfully hateful—

No face at all,

Whose gaze, in its ugliness,

Threatens my right to open my eyes,

Whose bulbous, vulgar shape

Practically begs to be popped.

 

But my enemy, you forget,

Is no man,

Who can be shot from a distance.

He lives too close,

And I must hold him in my hand.

 

So when I venture to prod him

With a thorny branch,

Or a serpent’s tooth,

The killing is not so clean.

I am splattered with his contents,

My oxford shirt

Soiled with wet,

 

Which, at first,

I think will dry

With the rising of the sun.

But at daybreak, I see

My shirt stained with red,

As if I wore a second heart,

And it sticks to my skin

As scripture might stick to a parchment.

 

Worse still,

Though I always took care

To keep him in my left hand,

Now in my right,

I feel that awful, grainy texture

Of latex between my fingers.

 

And as I catch myself—

Reflected in murderers’ garb, passing by puddles

And storefront windows,

I see that my square jaw has rounded,

That my cheekbones have disappeared,

That, more and more,

My face is not a face at all,

But that same balloon.

 

My enemy

Is not like you or me.

He is no man

Of flesh and blood,

Who can be shot from a distance.

For in killing him,

He has entered me,

And will never leave.

 

Perhaps—

He was never outside me

At all.

 

 

~

 

 

The Marching Band: A Meditation on the Omer (May 15, 2025, New York, NY)

To avoid music

During these days of Omer

Is impossible.

 

Sure,

You can lock away your headphones

                        In the dark square drawer of the law

            Hide away from concerts and weddings,

            Or hang up your guitar by its strings

                        On the highest branch of your cedar tree.

 

But,

            As sure as daylight

            Or the Angel of Death—

Music will find you:

            In the Muzak opening for the drugstore intercom,

            In the ringtone interrupting your rabbi’s sermon,

            In the saxophone playing dreamily

On the other side of the park—

 

One flees from music only

As one fasting might flee from a flood.

 

To abstain from music, then,

As one counts down to Revelation

Is not to go like Moses

In retreat up the silent Mountain,

Is not to close one’s ears

            To the song of the world,

For one cannot truly close one’s ears

            Until they will not hear anything again.

 

To abstain from music, rather,

Is only to abstain from choice—

            To give the radio dial up to God,

To stand still as the floodwaters rush on,

            Falling backwards as they sweep you off your feet.

 

And now,

            As I wait at a bus stop

            In Downtown Ithaca on a Sunday afternoon,

A marching band sets up

            In the pavilion across the street.

            As they begin to play,

I do not run for righteous cover,

But stand there waiting

In submissive transgression

To hear the song that I have been offered.

 

I cannot put to words

            What it means when music finds me

                        But in the blaring of their trumpets

                                    And the flaming red of their uniforms,

                                                I hear a faint word echo

                                                            Down the sloping stairs of the pavilion:

                                                                        I…I…I…

 

__________
Spencer Szwalbenest is a rabbinical student at Hebrew Union College in New York, and is currently serving as rabbinic intern at the Community Synagouge in Port Washington, New York. He has previously published poetry and aphorisms in Neshaminy, Ritualwell, The Jewish Literary JournalSurgam, and The Current. In his spare time, he enjoys hiking, volunteering, and following Philadelphia sports. Spencer is from Yardley, PA.

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