The ten commandments say nothing, in the translations I’ve read, against coveting my neighbor’s good fortune, timing, intentions, sense of style, or the countless other intangibles gifted by Nature and our DNA's mischievous inventions.
I’m a strict constructionist, when it suits me, and especially so with documents carved in stone by invisible hands having no recorded fondness for the market.
I’d trade places with any nameless witch caught cavorting in her coven’s canopied oases, their cauldron-ringing capers and care-free cackles cheered by owl hoots and cricket song;
Or the smallish, self-sacrificing spider who rather than a cigarette gets a close-up view of his mate’s spinnerets dispensing the silk sheets to wrap him as a happy meal deferred.
I also envy their creepy hatchlings who weeks later will climb to the tip-tops of firry fingers, cast a single wistful thread and wait for the wish-fulfilling wind to carry them lifetimes away.
That’s how I could stiff this chill that taps me on the shoulder, and chase after a far-off warmth I’ve weened since my weaning was done.
I count these covets no sins.
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