Looking down at us From an enormous distance A cold piece of stone Dust-covered, desert, barren— Yet from where I sit, a beacon. A nightlight of comfort For those of us Up all night, Too tired to fall asleep— Too wakeful to stop moving, Moment to moment Unable to cease, Our minds awhirl, We look up— Past windy branches And threads of cloud, fog, A bright circle in the sky. Up there: truly alone. A paradise in time of pandemic. But: it is an inhuman place, Designed to kill visitors. No, it’s a dream (or nightmare) To believe that humans, No matter the risk they pose, Hate they bring, anger they provoke, Can live without each other. And so we look up, from down below. A friend once said I must be a perfectionist Because I loved round things And wore, in school, a round ring Filled with a large orb of stone. She traced it with her finger, And said, “You see? It never stops. It represents Infinity.” - Meredith Alexander Kunz, April 2020
What an exquisite–and meaningful–poem!
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