Last year the poetry editor of a small New York-based magazine asked if I was interested in writing a poem on friendship, to which I joyously responded yesyesyes. It was summer and I had just returned from a late evening walk by the river, my heart still full from the glow of the fireflies that lit up the woods along its edge. For some of us, poetry is a dark, dark secret, its stain spilling but held inside random pages in old notebooks, too much of a guilty pleasure to be shared with strangers. There are better poets, I thought, who publish on love and war and rising prices and everything in between. But this time it was about friendship. This time the stakes were high.