Monday, April 1, 2024

Eternity is the problem

The way the Bay stretches before me 

when I step 

      over the yellow hill of Oyster park—all filmy lilac—

and a necklace of sparkling jewels

      light the San Mateo bridge—

my heart trips—a soft bobbing 

      against my ribs, legs turn to silk.


My arms swing wide out to the side

       as if I might alight.  


So drugged am I by the great expanse and 

      strong evening breeze, 

and the sky ablaze as if heralding 

      a great triumph, a great gratitude.


Forgotten is this morning‘s walk 

     as the widow,

teary on a muddy trail 

      between a steep hill and a waterless creek


who stops beside a brown leaf dangling 

      rag-like beside the fresh green newborns,

who follows the deer tracks 

      to the edge of the lake,


who waits for a breeze to nudge her 

     to the next moment and

cries because crying 

      gives her something to do 

about this thing 

      that nothing can be done about. 


It’s eternity— eternity is the problem.  

      It falls out from under you 

like a sink hole.


My man who loved me with a 

       mother's patience is no more. 

His green eyes far from light.

       His comb, wool socks--

      

the closet full of things 

      that outlive him. 


 Death is a crime. 

       If you are alive and glad to be alive, 

 death is theft, a mean assault. 


And if you have no faith, there's no appeal. 

       No one rises from the grave. 


But he is dead, my dearest, we've been 

      disconnected by every measure.


A box of bone bits centered on the table, 

      the one he passed every day for years— 

now his altar. 


So while he is nowhere, detached from me,
      in measureless space,

I prepare for the rain that's forecast, 

       plant the bulbs he meant to plant, 

make his dog stop sniffing his shoes. 



Between the branches



My grandson wants to bury our black lab’s ashes 

       in the west corner of our yard 


under the Manzanita tree that leans on

       his bedroom window 


until he remembers we plan to move to Alameda 

      and worries we'd have to dig her up 

           and bury her in our new yard.  


I propose that Ruby would want to stay

      at the home she spent her life in,

          her bones nurturing the tree that shades

               the room she shared with you. 


And you know, I add, that tree stands high 

      above the house

          and so all of the San Francisco Bay

               can be enjoyed from every branch 


and when we take our walks along the shore, 

      we will be in the tree’s view 

          and it will always find us 

               if we want to be found.  


I would love that. I want to be found,

     my grandson says and because he is only 8, 

          we hug with extravagant affection.  




What a loss!

 The oncologist and I sit eyeballs to eyeballs—mine frozen 

in fear as if he’d pointed a gun at me and cocked it—and 


His lips keep moving:  It’s too small to bother about. 


Pop, pop, pop! This man’s words! 


Too small too small . No spider webs! 


What a rush! 

As if robins hatched in the hidden 

nests of my body


and the doctor and this white room fall away

and I see the sky is blue and I cannot 

find enough words.  


This body is mine again, returned whole

from the morgue! 


A tiny black comma on your scan. Go home. 

Run, baby, run! 


I will! I will!


Every hair on my head, my arms, brows,

inside my ears--

feels like a bee sting!


I am not dead! 


There is a sudden intrusion of sunlight

into my grave, now empty.


So this thing has gone from nothing 

to everything

to this!


The weight of me changes again.


All my frantic notes to friends—

all that needless suffering,


And looking back to my near death,  

I admit to a freakish excitement, 

a kind of shocking sense of new adventure. 


I will be dying soon, I was thinking,

and all will be known.


What a loss!

What a sensational loss!



The virus

Every day she measures the sugar 
      and gluten--she is so careful.

Every night she mixes petals and seeds 
      and blends them with the unsweetened blood
            of a pomegranate. 

Every noon she comes down on her knees
      and palms into a down-ward facing dog

and the 33 bones of her spine from her skull
      to her coccyx curl then straighten 

like a ladder directly into the arms of
      long life--longevity belongs to this body. 

It ferments in her seeds, her tailbone,
      her sour blood-red juice. 

All would have grown stronger day by day,
        drink by drink, 
               downward-facing by downward facing

had not that virus, that thing both dead and alive,
      not awakened in the darkness under
            her diligently examined breast.