Life
on the Planet Corona
The
sky,
full
of itself,
looks
down
with
nothing
else to
give.
You
are so thirsty
you
wish for rain.
You
mutter like
a
dying man
face
down in
the
flotsam
of a night
of
bad dreams.
But
no dream
is
bad;
every
dream
worth
its
salt.
Do
you wish
or
pray for rain?
If
you pray for rain
is
that prayer
a
real prayer
if
its prayed
by
a huckster
pointing
his rod
at
a faucet?
Are
you
virus
or vessel
and
which
the
diviner?
Lying
here you feel
something
vital
is
being taken
from
you.
Something
other
is
using your body
to
stay alive.
Whatever
it is,
it’s
desperate,
greedier
for life
than
you.
You
hear
a
distant siren
feel its way
through
the city
toward
some
anonymous
need.
But
not yours.
Why be content
to
fish for
God
in the sky?
Are
you hoping
to
snag him
on
this very line?
Would
that you
could
extract
a
message of grace
in
spite of yourself.
Across
the street
at
the Port Authority
asylum
seekers
are
stepping off buses
wanting
what you
want:
the
right to grow free.
But
this is no garden.
Here
on planet Corona,
it
takes a crack
for
a seed
to
find light
enough
to grow.
If
you hadn’t been
so happy there
would
you be hurting
this
much here?
Only
when one feels
the
loss of something
does
it take on
its proper
measure;
a
reward
reserved
for
only those
who
can let go.
The
local tribe
of
pot bangers
brings
you to
the
window.
It
must be 7:00.
Their
noise making,
an
impromptu call
to
honor those
who
care for
others.
Why
not make
your heart
a
makeshift drum?
If this is joy
had you ever been
truly
happy?
You
who’d always
insisted
on going
your
own way.
If
so, why?
Imagine
if
as
a teenager
love
had
landed
you in
an
institution.
Love
literally
made
you ill.
Believing
love
couldn’t
exist
without
heartbreak,
this
loneliness
will make for a
sorry
state
of
grace.
9/01/22