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Jump

SUZANNE LUMMIS

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Jump

 

 

So what’s it like

 

to jump from the Golden Gate Bridge

 

he asked—my brother asked—into

 

the face blown wavy as spit salt

 

and foam rinsed sand.

 

Hardly anyone lives he tells me,

 

my brother the paramedic dropped in

 

to visit, now skimming the morning news

 

for a story, maybe a few lines.

 

Funny, he says, the guy last night reeked

 

like the ones who come up dead.

 

It’s as if when they smack down

 

the skin shreds, the raw flesh drinks sea –

 

not the blue, frothy surfaced one we

 

dream of but ooze and oils, the old,

 

unwashed, death infected sea.

 

Well, those aren’t his words exactly.

 

But he does say the jumpers reek

 

as if—it sounds disgusting but—the sea

 

pushed through their pores.  Today,

 

the morning after, nothing’s

 

in the news. He sets the paper down.  So,

 

who knows if the guy pulled through?

 

Paramedics never hear. They move on.

 

Some years back, he says, statistics

 

starting climbing—hurdling—

 

toward a milestone, the one thousandth

 

jumper since the bridge went up

 

(that is, of those we know about).

 

Right then the CHP quit counting –or

 

anyway, they wouldn’t tell the press—

 

then resumed when someone sailed

 

past the mark.

 

Who needs all those dreamers

 

conveying their Saranwrapped last notes

 

to their deepest pockets, driving

 

the long, gray Bay Bridge

 

to the one whose cables swoop

 

and rise, the one we call “Golden”

 

(though the factory named that paint

 

“Vermillion Orange”).

 

Who needs them parking, strolling

 

the walkway, tearless, to blend

 

with the lesser Sad, to avoid

 

the watchman’s eye, then abruptly

 

hauling up and over, each one

 

hoping Nine Hundred Ninety Nine

 

went over just before?

 

It’s a job to try and talk them down,

 

a job for Coast Guards combing

 

through the waters, and for those called in

 

to collect what floated up.

 

They call it “blunt force trauma”—

 

crushed ribs and caved-in spleens.

 

They imagine hitting sleek as blades,

 

the dreamers, so they won’t come up at all.

 

Some don’t. And some swell like brine-

 

soaked sausages then roll, eventually,

 

onto the Farallen Island shores, thirty

 

miles out, where crabs trim them down.

 

But there was one jumper—Baldwin—

 

1985, who lived to tell the tale.

 

The instant he flew past the “chord,”

 

that beam—the last hard true thing

 

a jumper glimpses before air—he knew

 

every dumb mistake he’d ever made

 

could be fixed, except

 

this one. My brother stirs his coffee.

 

Breakfast things still settle on the table,

 

Though their end is growing near,

 

our beloved parents live. They must be

 

close by in that house my father bought

 

so many years ago, in those rooms.

 

The sea’s blunt force is trauma,

 

though it hardly seemed so then.

 

As seen through that first-floor window,

 

you’d think its smoky greyish blue

 

could breathe a man in whole and turn him

 

into that, bluish smoke and distance.

 

I love my brother—stupid to say that,

 

right, in a poem? So literal like

 

that, so banal? Then let’s say it’s not

 

a poem but a jump, four and one half

 

seconds from the bridge to the Bay,

 

and I’ve used up three. I love

 

my brother’s humor, that firefighter

 

kind, that paramedic kind—

 

call it “Dark Survivalist”— the comedy

 

of those who see death every day.

 

And what he tells me next, in the end,

 

makes us both laugh.

 

What happened? Did he answer?

 

My brother looked at the drowned one

 

still alive. The head gaped and lolled.

 

From nose and ears he bubbled like a toy.

 

He gibbered—Jim could hardly

 

make out what. Old Pepsi jingles, 80s

 

sit-com scores…

 

My brother leaned in and spied a clearing

 

in one eye.

 

So what’s it like to jump from the Golden Gate Bridge?

 

And the drenched one said—and who knows

 

if a clear word ever rose from him again—

 

he said, just before he seemed to unfold

 

inside himself like a diver and head

 

down, he said, just before his eyes

 

turned toward the sea and rolled

 

from sight, he said, looking

 

directly at my brother, man                                                    

 

to man, and by God right

 

from the horse’s mouth

 

if ever a horse’s                                                                     

 

mouth there

 

was, he said

 

Dude,                                                                                    

 

           it was awesome!

 

                                   

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