Summer Birthday Speech

You know how it is. The asterism

of hot days. The undoing of the sun.

The dried rose hung upside down to

symbolize beauty in age. Death in age.

Transitive, death in beauty. Its

implications. You cannot stop playing,

after a while, after a while you just

realize there is death and beauty and age

in everything. You know how it is,

the anger of not being able to own the

sun and the slow realization that there

is sun in you, you are in the sun. The

anger at sun colonizers. They’re

everywhere. You can’t escape the feeling

that you’ve missed the prime, being

displaced and all. By a sunrise, by a

sunset. Dried roses don’t own the sun

just because they are consumed by it.

You cannot stop thinking about the sun

after you forget about it, it’s too

ubiquitous, too bright, soaping up the

sky. You think, sometimes, when the

sky is especially ash gray as dead skin,

that the sun is a cleaning lady, enslaved

by the domestic labor of brightening

so many people’s days, then you realize

it has to do it for eight, nine planets,

that it probably reaches beyond there,

and that it would burn without any

of those planets or people. You know

how it is. You cannot remember the

last time you burned alone. You know

how it is. The cataract of time. The

glare of distant Jupiter, unavoidable.

Life in supernova. The lift of a ladybug’s

wings. Eyes of wings, wings of—you

know how it is.


Also by Vanessa Y. Niu

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