Nobody knows

Most galaxies don’t have rings.
The Cat’s Eye Galaxy has two –
A bright inner ring forging stars
and an outer one cold and diffuse.

And nobody knows why,
nobody knows why,
the Sun is cool
and the Moon is high,
but nobody knows why.

The Nike of Samothrace has
impossible wings and a modern
brace to keep her hands raised.
She may have balanced on her island.

But nobody knows why,
nobody knows why,
cities may fall
and marble may fly,
but nobody knows why.

Caterpillars can be trained to fear
ammonia before they harden and
turn to soup. Despite becoming goo,
the butterfly will remember.

And nobody knows why,
nobody knows why,
a mushroom will run
and a rabbit can cry,
but nobody knows why.

I’m frightened of change.
Choice paralyzes. At the start.
But all of us get used to it, whatever
it is, and keep going, or start again.

And nobody knows why,
nobody knows why,
I painted a rock
and I baked you a pie,
but nobody knows why.

New world

i’ve gotten a little older lately and i can’t see as far ahead as i used to and that bothers me because in the fog i start seeing shapes and those shapes look like dead ends but in the end it’s just my pattern-seeking brain trying to find the worst-case possibilities and try to avoid them and sadly there’s nothing i can do to clear the fog or light the way or even unsee the things in the gloom but one thing i can do is eat my strawberries and pet the two-headed calf while counting the stars by their ancient light in the night’s great dome and another thing i can do is understand that even while this world might be ending to one degree or possibly another the ending will not last and there will be another world and if i make it there by the glory of any god that exists or is imagined in it i will find a way to love it and celebrate its magic and even here in this world between however long it lasts i will find the beauty and fun however well hidden because there is a difference between dying and dead and while change is frightening it has a second face which is possibility and hope is seeing that second face whenever i feel the presence of the first and that is the balance that allows me to greet the sun again as it rises against all imagined odds over the day’s
new world.

Even as it breaks

It’s so easy to break things –
trust, a heart, a nation.
So much more work
to build.

It’s easy to get sad
and feel helpless.
It’s easy to get angry and
want to break something back.

It’s difficult when your ears
are filled with the sound of shattering
to hear the blackbird sing
or to look up and see the trees’ fingers.

The hurt is designed
to make you feel blind. 
Wipe the blood
from your eyes

and take a moment
to notice everything 
even as it breaks
a seed becomes
a burning sun
take the time
dissention
to love
some-
thing
and
make
it

grow

Adapt

Enclosed, uprooted,
and left hungry, 
I will find my own way.

I reach to the sun and
create
my own sustenance. 

Once I’ve had enough,
I put down roots
and share with my neighbors.

Sunrise

I never meant to land in the water. 
I’m no sailor, no navigator.

Tectonic forces have cast me adrift,
the land ran away from me, 

islands on the horizon receding
faster than I could learn to turn a rudder.

I lay for ages in the cold doldrums, water
turned to lead, air to sulfur, I could not breathe –

until, gradual as the dawn, the arrival
of these misty storm birds,

who pull me forward until I am upright
and regain momentum,

moving toward the harbor I cannot see
but have faith is there beyond the swells.

Albatrosses, frigate birds, gulls?
I don’t know, or much care.

They are my wings, my strength, my sails,
this boat, the wind, the waves,

as am I, in turn, for them, 
hoisting each other toward the sunrise.

Wild lavender

In the low fingers
of the Alps, lavender grows,
fragrance among vines.

It’s not the only thing
that flourishes in the spare
roughs of the maquis.

But by human hands
the blooms are reared, and come to
symbolize the land.

————————

I too have summer
and winter thoughts forever
budding in my head.

I try to train them
like bonsai. On the best days
my summer garden

grows tall and pulls me
straight up to the soft blue sky,
frost beneath my toes.

————————

In Texas there is
no want for French lavender. 
It grows in gravel

in our own gorgeous
wastelands. Autochthonous ward
against scorpions

and other household
demons, dried and stored for this
latest queer winter.

Bright flowers in winter

I will not buy dark flowers until the wake is announced.
I will sing bright songs and stoke the fire.

I will write stories in green and give them away
and my friends will read them to their friends.

I will paint the ceiling in pastel and neon and
we will spin beneath it late until we fall down laughing.

While watching for bitter torches in the long night
I will bake apples and scatter incense and magnesium

so that if the house should be burned down
it will shine and smell like cinnamon.

I will not obey in advance;
and I will not surrender my joy.

NOISE

I’m driving out of town and the radio 
starts going fuzzy. At first the words
and measures are softened, but then
they begin to drown in droning chaos.

I change the channel and clear the air. 
But the buzz creeps back, faster now, 
filling my head, even at rest stops there is
no respite from the constant orange noise.

It feels like a bomb has gone off and filled
the airwaves. An invasion of a thousand people
inside my head shouting GOOD! and EVIL!
even when the car is quiet.

I thought I would know better by now, after all these years. 
I should know when to tune out, to jump out of the car 
and run through the dark green woods until I become 
human again before turning that machine back on.

But I don’t. It demands
my attention and I give it.
I’m not adapted to living
through the making of history.

And I suppose I am grateful to know
that the noise has not yet made me deaf.
That I have not lost my capacity for horror.
And that I can still make myself turn the dial, 

and search for signal.

New year

Most new years are white, blank Januarys –
a chance for change and new beginning.

On this year’s horizon, instead of blanketing snowclouds, 
dark thunderheads. Harbingers of the flood.

The river will fill. And the lakes, and the ocean.
We’re so used to building dams against the rising tides

that when they break and we are caught in
history’s currents we rifle for footing

and try to hold back the waters with our hands
instead of remembering that we can swim.

Everything will not survive.
But some things will.

Everyone will not see the future.
But most of us will

and we will have to dream it.

And under the snow
and rain
and water
and mud
and silt
and shit
and hate
and winds
and dead earth
and fires of change

there is, under all that, a new year,
where small things will happen

small troubles, and small joys,
small enough for a human to hold,

and above all of that, at night, while
our worried brains are calmed,

the fixed stars will spin
as they always have.