Anxious Behavior
The way blackbirds solve for
winter. How upset I am
without feathers. No black collar, no tailwind. On the floor,
regardless, crying. Health insurers hate me. I hate me too,
I tell Denice from Toledo, so who wants me
in the divorce? My days are all light haloes and
automation. I don’t look at sunsets like I used to. Honeybees mob
in flung distance; worries oxen the sky across my forehead, owl down inside the
dales of my cheeks. Charred land and brawny newscasts
tracking Canadian wildfires from helicopter. New York stained tangerine
in June. Below
my bedroom window, coyotes harangue. I imagine they’re wolves when
I’m scared. I don’t know what that says
about me. It means I want
a wolf. I want to know enough to name
the way wolves scent along the wind with senses so superior
they stir storms of electrical signaling after every inhale. And the beaver,
how her teeth curve against different kinds of trees. I also crave
empty spaces. Hunger
gaps. The sensation
of biting a male spider raw. To lick a bear cub's paw after a thorn. I catalog
the underside of a tern’s upturned wing, a pair of gulls, a brown bat’s sewing
flight. Swifts spend so much of their lives planning
around incoming storms. Anxious
behavior? We’re similar animals: ozone
stung and afraid
of the horizon. My mind,
a fishing net. Too many holes; the trout swim
through. Off the path
white bones lance a village of mushrooms. The blackbirds have been
and gone. What I know
I know without help: By now
the dead carry different names.
