Distillation

If I distill my life down to moments,
a cup of coffee at 7 am,
its bloom of steam
drifting above the dark liquid,
like fog;
the shock of cold air against sleep-warm skin
when I take the dog out, door slamming,
frozen rain clicking,
against the ice-crusted driveway…
then I can move forward,
only then.

Is this a life?
This collection of disposable days,
untethered from past or future,
is this meaning?

My grief makes me whither and hide,
it erases my purpose
like a hand reaching down,
smearing the careful construct
of my better self.

There’s comfort in picking up a moment,
separating it,
if only to watch it dissolve into the next one.
There’s reassuring certainty,
in the unraveling.

I recognize the freedom
in these isolated days,
if not deep satisfaction,
never that.

I’m knitting each new row of stitches,
then undoing all the knots,
so there will be no warm blanket,
no striped scarf,
no bulky wool hat…
nothing to show anyone in the end.

Eventually, even the yarn disintegrates
as if it never existed at all.

Advice To A Baby Bird

Food is your first priority,
but there’s danger from above and below.
Remember, each meal could be your last
and the rain that quenches your thirst
will just as easily drown you.

Watch for shadows, but don’t jump at them
lest you waste your hard-won energy
on a Jay instead of a raptor.

Be wary of the cowbird’s eggs
which borrow precious space,
at the expense of your brood.
Be mindful of starlings,
jealous souls with murderous intent.
They’ll kill your young
to make room for their own.

Wind is as deadly to newborn chicks
as stray cats and lawnmowers.

Don’t take time for granted.
You may have a year or three or five,
but remember we are birds,
born to die too soon,
so fly often and with joy.

If you learn the language of the sky
you may survive to perch
on the highest branch of the tallest pine
and rub your beak against
the mountain’s cold spine
only then will you understand
that your life is not small or fleeting,
but as endless as the web
that holds the world together.