In My Heart, I’m Always Princess Peach

In My Heart, I’m Always Princess Peach
Literature

In My Heart, I’m Always Princess Peach


Playing Super Mario 2 with My Kid on My Old Nintendo

He marvels at how I locate every buried 
potion. That I know when to uproot a radish

and heave. I sack a shush of Shy Guys
and wonder what better knowledge

I’ve surrendered to preserve space
for this: the thumb-click sequence required

to commandeer the flying carpet. Though
science says I’m wrong—we have near-limitless

repositories. It’s the access that we lose,
our brains sometimes erasing pathways

to make us more adaptable.
I like the nearness of this dream world

of Mario’s. I always choose Peach because the dress
catches air when I jump and I can float along

for a bit. The ability to jump, to make your signature,
to navigate a known place like your childhood

home—all examples of motor memory,
which we acquire through repetition and draw on

unconsciously. Motor memory doesn’t decline
with age so I could forever find the way

to my bedroom in that single-wide,
were it still there. My hand could scrawl

my name on anything I thought was mine.
I could keep chasing magic

carpets. Keep breaking the beaker of potion
to reveal the key. My kid cheers—we found the key!—

but ghosts give chase and I never
formed memory of how to put
them

behind me. When I die of ghost-shock,
my kid knows we can do

better. With kindness,
pats the hand not holding the controller.

Better Home, Better Gardens

Click to enlarge

Read the original article here

Products You May Like

Articles You May Like

How to Wax a Barbour Jacket: The Paper Towel Hack That Changed Everything
Megan Thee Stallion Granted Restraining Order Against Tory Lanez
9 Poetry Collections That Build Immersive Narrative Worlds
Adam Ross Discusses Child Actors, Ethics, and the Inspiration Behind “Playworld”
AI could assemble a record-breaking quantum computer out of cold atoms