Sorry but I will never tell my daughter about soundwaves
wriggling like worms through walls and doors
and down stairs to my living room couch where I hear her
in the shower belting her overflowing heart out,
snatches of pop songs intermingled with snarls and Mozart
riffs so uninhibited, so locomotive through the straw
house the first little piggy built, and, anyway
isn’t it great how we can fill ourselves up with anything?
A walk to the grocery store can set us brimming.
Flicking outie belly buttons off avocados to find the ripe ones,
smacking the bass drum of a hollowed-by-sweetness watermelon,
saying small prayers over the lobsters' death row aquariums.
It's like how last night astronauts flew
the farthest any humans have ever been from earth,
observing parts of the moon never really studied before,
and, since one of the astronauts was in mourning
for his wife, they named a crater after her
because it was so bright. Have you ever been to a place
where the only thing there is beside you is a huge Nothingness
and it's opening its mouth, about to swallow you whole?
What is more human than, in that moment, thinking of love?
Look up. Squint, and you can just see it: light, a song unfurling.
