July 6, 2025

parade down the one road in Kalymnos
car after car after car with white ribbons on the mirrors
blasting air horns and car horns alike
one stop for coffee
[or was it “coffee”?]
and arriving to see and meet even more family
and friends

the bride arriving
surprisingly on time
[surprising for cultural tradition]
and watching the ceremony all in Greek
with an Athens-native whispering to us
what and why things were happening
and even the jokes that take place in today’s ceremonies
all while standing
and waiting
with rice in hand
to shower upon those before us
tying a marital bond

and, similar to American traditions, congratulating afterwards with rice as well,
then swept off for photos
and a reception
but with traditional Greek dancing
for hours before the modern dj’s set
and no specific time for food
[the main course being served at 1am]
and partying, dancing, and talking with folks
until being dropped off at our hotel at 4:30am
to hear the roosters crowing

i’m so glad we made the trip for this

July 5, 2025 [part 2]

time
disappears
when you spend it on a beach
soaking up the rays of the sun
[through three layers of spf 50
only to burn burn burn anyway]
and swimming in the ocean
[or is it a sea?]
but somehow
there’s no need to be
running running running

we’ll get places when we get there

[and this island is small enough that it is likely
we’ll still be on time
if we leave a little late]

July 5, 2025

how quickly we get used to
the nice things in life

a filling and gorgeous breakfast
out on a shady balcony
overlooking a small square in Athens
and lazy writing right afterwards

only two days of that, and yet i think that is what i’ll miss most

but who knows what the island of Kalymnos has in store for us

or the ferry ride to Rhodes

or Paris or Madrid or Lisbon

or even all the trains we have yet to take

but i see why kip in the past has insisted
on staying one place
and living
like a natural-born citizen
of wherever we are visiting

July 4, 2025 [part 2]

kip and i have spent a fair amount of christmases
and new years[es]
in foreign countries

and i
personally
have spent a few july 4ths
far away from the united states

perhaps this could become another tradition
because, damn, i wouldn’t mind
never having to look at another nationalist capitalist display
of red, white, and blue
touting patriotism as a personality
to be sold and bought
at any price

July 4, 2025

it is very nice
waking up on the fourth
and not being reminded
of our country’s supposed “greatness”
because we are on a whole ‘nother continent
which believes more like we do —
that the united states has done
just about
nothing
to earn the term
great

[or maybe they don’t think about our country much at all
which is, perhaps,
even better]

July 3, 2025 [part 2]

after walking around
and around and around
the tiny streets of Greece
trying to find one specific place
that may
or may not
be closed

an evening in a roof-top hot tub
[even if it is colder than expected]
while gazing across the way
at the lit-up acropolis
and thinking of all the birds you saw
while wandering
and all the great food you had
between your thousands of steps

that’s
the way to end a day

July 3, 2025

i still can’t get over
how much this city,
though so different
from my concrete jungle,
can remind me so much
of home

from the pigeons
and mourning doves
and stray cats
everywhere

to the instances of
so many different
languages being spoken
and written down

to its walkability
and metro system,
even the tourist traps
are cute reminders
of my home’s downtown

[feeling at home
even in a foreign city —
the story of new yorkers abroad]

July 2, 2025 [part 2]

the Acropolis was built
stone by stone by hand
and when it was eroded
by siege
or nature
or time
it was rebuilt
stone by stone
by hand
and these days
though the hands are working
machinery
the conservation process
is rebuilding things
to seem
as they would have been
thousands of years ago
still
stone
by
stone

July 2, 2025

being dehydrated
while walking around in Greece
is nice because
you don’t have to use the restroom
nearly as much as usual

but it’s not completely great, because
you’re dehydrated
in Greece