If I shut the border, no one will shut their window, hide in their closet, lock their door.
They would shake the blinds of moths, bring the dog in from the doghouse, let the cat feast after the mouse hole has been plugged with a door wedge.
In the distance the train whistle blows dispersing mist and rain. No one steps off nor boards.
The bird nest is not abandoned. The hollow of the tree stays hollow. Nothing has shut down at all.
My pen scribbles a poem only to watch the black words return to the reservoir.
I open the dictionary to the word “hope”, but the page refuses to settle until I put all the words in them face down on the writing table.
My stoma grumbles louder than my stomach. I shut my cancer in the mother-of-pearl. My wife’s cancer is placed in the small valise of all our memories.
I can’t shut down the museum. It already is. I can’t shut down the cinemas. They already are. Only the pharmacies are open.
I shut down my mouth on my broken jaw with five missing teeth only to feel the maw of death.
I shut down the ash of my childhood into a golden urn of my own design.
I shut down America, I shut down God, putting them both between the now empty covers of the dictionary missing hope.
I shut down my passions, my emotions in the moldy basement of my despair. My shut down love is chained in the dungeon.
Shut up, shut down, I repeat to myself, until those words lose all definition, until my lips are sealed in pain and the only thing left is my total shutdown.