Grief
There is a slick grey smear down my sternum
like a seal stranded ashore
all wet black eyes and oily, lichened skin
cold weight between aching breasts.
Like particles entangled
with a universe between them
but still feeling the push and pull of the other.
That is what we are.
A chemical reaction. A kinetic energy. A rather simple
mathematical formula.
I dream of wrapping my hand around this grief.
I want to pluck it from my chest
feeling the sudden relief of its removal.
I would kiss it softly, fondly--
for it has been a long friend of mine--
and then I would slip it into the sea.
If ever there was a homeland for sorrow, it is the sea.
I would watch the dark shape of the thing disappear
into the cold waters.
A seal sliding between the waves.
A piece of jasper sinking into sand.
I would be sorry to see it go.
We are entangled, you and I,
as much as any two particles of matter ever could be.
When I have drowned our shared grief,
will you breathe again too?
Sand, stone, sea, sky.
All the grey things of the world now contain us.
We are so heavy.