Tuesday, August 31, 2021

Lessons from Darkness

 


"I'm afraid of the darkness, and the hole in it;

and I see it sometime of every day!"

                                --Martin Luther, in Luther

Everything you love will perish.  Try saying this to yourself

at breakfast, matching the amber-colored tea

twirl in the teapot.  Try it on the tree, the clouds, the dog

asleep under the table, the sparrow taking a bath

in the neighbor's gutter.  A magician's act: Presto!

On a morning you feel open enough to embrace it

imagine it gone.  Then pack the child's lunch: smooth the thick

peanut butter, the jeweled raspberry preserves,

over the bread.  Tell yourself the world

must go on forever.  This is why

you feed her, imagining the day--orderly--

unfolding, imagining what you teach her

is true.  Is something she will use.  This is why, later, you will go out

into the garden, among the calendula, rosemary, hibiscus,

run your finger along the trunk of hawthorn

as though it were the body

of a lover, thinking of the child

on the steps of the schoolyard, eating her sandwich.  Think nothing.

transparent air, where her hands are.


--Anita Barrows




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