December 31
    by michelle (2008) 
    
  When I was little, I remember I didn't like
  the last day in   the year because my mum,
  all dolled up and after dinner, 
  rushed out to   the world, without me.
  The door closed and it was good time I went to   bed.
  
  In my teenage, I remember I lost my companion,
  my beautiful   bitch, in a crowd. 
  We'd ran away from home. My heart sank,
  and then I   found her. What joy, what relief.
  And after a threatening night
  fighting   the bitter cold, together,
  we saw some workers carrying away
  our friend   from the corner,
  the homeless who told me
  that the cold was just in my   imagination.
  And he was right and wrong at the same time.
  
  When I was a   young woman,
  I remember a 31st when I overslept. 
  People had already eaten   the grapes
  and burned up the fireworks.
  I woke up, jumped out of my   freezing bed in an attic
  with no water, no toilet, no electricity, no   stove.
  I crept out the window,
  onto the red-tiled roof
  to watch the   light of the city coming up like smoke...
  I smiled. I felt absolutely happy.   Unknowingly,
  I was able to enjoy the sunny side of poverty. 
  But poverty   was not a good place to be in.
  
  Then, I remember being a pacifist, 
  an   international witness in a country at war. 
  I had a mission. Workers had   locked themselves in a factory,
  and it was in the air -- a death squad might   hit the scene. 
  It was scary. I held tight to my camera,
  watched the night   with all my senses 
  and pretended nothing would ever happen.
  The guard,   hired by the owners, got drunk.
  He came to me. He was so young.
  For weeks,   he had been watching us
  caring, doing what we thought was right,
  and he   didn't want me to think
  he was on the dark side.
  I reminded him we were   nonpartisan - we did not
  see the world in terms of friends or fiends.
  He   wasn't listening. He had something to tell me.
  I could have cried my life out   of me just to make him shut up.
  I don't remember well... It's just I saw in   his eyes 
  he'd be questioned by his pals, he'd be tortured and   murdered,
  and then we'd find him, is it him?, yes, it is,
  in a ditch, like   all the others...
  I couldn't bear the thought of finding him in a   ditch.
  Would they just please leave him on the ground...
  I couldn't bear   the pain of knowing what life is like
  and knowing it could be something else   but it would not.
  
  I also remember friendship in a few 31sts.
  Spending   the whole night at home, coming out of our
  flatshared rooms into the common   area, the sitting room,
  to chat away all night long, or just be there,   together.
  
  I remember a 31st in the basement of a housing co-op in a   metropoli,
  all bundled up in bed, reading "One hundred years of   solitude"
  with my mother's death in the air, 
  my fight for independency   and survival, against confusion, in my breath.
  I remember I read nonstop for   over 24 hours,
  till I finished the book. No time to spare.
  
  Then one   year, I was under the cold rain
  in front of an open fire next to a military   base. 
  A grumpy woman pointed to a muddied old van
  where I could pick a   mat, a blanket, a sleeping bag,
  and then to a bender where I could seek   refuge in the night.
  Again, I was somewhere, with people, trying to change   the world,
  trying my best to fight the fears and violence in the world
  and   my own demons. And it was all powerful and fresh. 
  I felt like a wild   beautiful animal in the night,
  ready to lift the sun with my mates, 
  to   warm and heal this aching nightmare planet.
  
  
  And today I look into   your quiet loving eyes 
  and I can't believe it's the same life, my sweet   love.
  Now I know that when I was there you'd already left.
  
  I don't   know what will be
  but one thing seems to be certain --
  love's got some   part in it.