I knock on doors that refract light as sketched shapes of hope. That chimera of real and illusion.
I remember that in hospitals, maternity wards and hospice, doors are to be opened and shut with gloved hands, elbows or leaning hips.
I hold myself to a few words: I needed to go and so I do, "one-step at a time," when fortitude warms the path And otherwise, I remember a red light in the dark at 6 am in February, chortling engine with two hundred miles to traverse - I was sleepy and restless and beneath my hums on coffee breath a seed sprouted barbs and blossoms.
I doubled down on heartbreak and the fertility of schisms, because the world is shaped by twisting plates that ****** and slide into one another in dumb collision, and for all we glean of how, it may as well be on stone rafts of fate we built our hopes.