what if
i
 What does it mean to want an age-old call
 for change
 not to change
 and yet, also,
 to feel bullied
 by the call to change?
 How is a call to change named shame,
 named penance, named chastisement?
 How does one say
 what if
 without reproach? The root
 of chastise is to make pure.
 The impossibility of that—is that
 what repels and not
 the call for change?
 ii
 There is resignation in my voice when I say I feel
 myself slowing down, gauging like a machine
 the levels of my response. I remain within
 so sore I think there is no other way than release—
 so I ask questions like I know how
 in the loneliness of my questioning.
 What’s still is true; there isn’t even a tremor
 when one is this historied out.
 I could build a container to carry this being,
 a container to hold all, though we were never
 about completeness; we were never to be whole.
 I stand in your considered thoughts also broken,
 also unknown, extending
 one sentence—here, I am here.
 As I’ve known you, as I’ll never know you,
 I am here. Whatever is
 being expressed, what if,
 I am here awaiting, waiting for you
 in the what if, in the questions,
 in the conditionals,
 in the imperatives—what if.
 iii
 What if over tea, what if on our walks, what if
 in the long yawn of the fog, what if in the long middle
 of the wait, what if in the passage, in the what if
 that carries us each day into seasons, what if
 in the renewed resilience, what if in the endlessness,
 what if in a lifetime of conversations, what if
 in the clarity of consciousness, what if nothing changes?
 
 iv
 
 What if you are responsible to saving more than to changing?
 What if you’re the destruction coursing beneath
 your language of savior? Is that, too, not fucked up?
 You say, if other white people had not . . . or if it seemed like
 not enough . . . I would have . . .
 What if—the repetitive call of what if—is only considered repetitive
 when what if leaves my lips, when what if is uttered
 by the unheard, and what if
 what if is the cement of insistence
 when you insist what if
 this is.
 
 v
 What is it we want to keep conscious, to stay known, even as we
 say, each in our own way, I so love I know I shrink I’m asked
 I’m also I react I smell I feel I think I’ve been told I remember I
 see I didn’t I thought I felt I failed I suspect I was doing I’m sure
 I read I needed I wouldn’t I was I should’ve I felt I could’ve I
 never I’m sure I ask . . .
 You say and I say but what
 is it we are telling, what is it
 we are wanting to know about here?
 
 vi
 What if what I want from you is new, newly made
 a new sentence in response to all my questions,
 a swerve in our relation and the words that carry us,
 the care that carries. I am here, without the shrug,
 attempting to understand how what I want
 and what I want from you run parallel—
 justice and the openings for just us.
                    
                        Claudia Rankine, "what if" from Just Us.  Copyright © 2020 by Claudia Rankine.  Reprinted by permission of Graywolf Press, www.graywolfpress.org.
                    
                
            
                                                
                        
                            
                    
                        Source:
                        Just Us
                                                                                                                                                                    (Graywolf Press, www.graywolfpress.org, 2020)