Skip to content

Orbit

She believed the story

of the 24-hour day,

the certain tilt of the world

as it bowed around the sun

and kept its spinning gentle

without moods or decisions.

 

She believed that each day

required a shape,

a salutation of the dawn,

a careful honouring of tides,

a shared understanding of the vesper time.

She watched the devotional pattern

like a missed train,

or three cars back

from the front of the journey.

 

The body, yes,

its filtering of sun and food

and penchant for dancing,

learned to follow daylight.

 

It listens to rustling in the dark,

and sometimes flies at night.

 

And she has started to absorb

its whispered secret,

the unseen freedom

in the orbit that it follows,

obedient to the pull.

 

The light she thought she needed

lives in a different synchronicity

than the sun of her own real heart.

 

The orbit of her days

spins to follow a rhythm

she is just beginning to taste in her blood.

 

Each gift of 24 hours

is potter’s clay

for the spinning of her own diurnal web

which lasts a little longer

…so that the waking

and the sleeping,

the rising and setting down,

are not confined to a visible gravity.

 

The movements of her flow,

her true orbit,

do not fit neatly in the perceived day.

She needs more time,

and has it.

Published inPoems