I compare my loneliness to the sound of a mourning dove. It starts low and small, then goes up It repeats the more each call goes unanswered
Perhaps letting it out, alone and loud over and over eases the pain, yet also pokes at the caged creature within encouraging a festering of wounds.
A mourning dove never seems to be where the other birds are Because when it calls it becomes all I can hear It guides me far into the fog, ever elusive until I finally spot it high above on a line.
Every time it gets a little easier. Every time it starts to sound less like a Gymnopédie No. 1 and more like a Claire de Lune major key as well as minor content as well as sorrowful.
It's alone, and it's still singing.
I saw a mourning dove today and decided to write a poem about it. Fun fact: the typical (mournful) cooOOOooo-woo-woo-woo call of the mourning dove is only done by the male when they are looking for a mate.