Tom Snarsky

SHAPE SORTER

What’s crazy is we live
long enough to toss ourselves
differently into the waves
of time, like as children pain
was endless, intolerable, & now
weeks float by like coriander
in the potato soup of being
not our parents but not
entirely not them either, snow
falling more in the memory now
than in real life, mid-Atlantic
winters mostly gray duration
punctuated by rain & surprise
65-degree days, fresh apples
in the grocery store, edible
stickers that tell you
the four-digit code to type in
when they won’t scan.
The man who invented
the barcode scanner helped
me survive my teaching
career, all seven years of it,
by giving me money. I spent
the money on things like white
board markers & laminated
posters with messages
such as: “The essence
of mathematics lies
in its freedom.” Set
theory has a high body count
when it comes to madness,
Cantor lecturing on Bacon
-Shakespeare connections
that no experts now believe
because to look directly
at different infinities
for too long must just be
so inconsonant with living,
in which most seeds
crack open but don’t
grow, or are flooded
to the surface to feed
the birds. Asphalt worms,
displaced snails, the whole
system of governance
that emerges when pack
animals need to move
upstream, even the phrase
pack animal
—does it mean
animal in a pack, or
animal I’ve put a pack
on? I try to tell someone
I love I’m here if they need
to talk, & the message says
“Seen”. The cats take turns
rubbing their faces on the new
fish toy I got for Mackerel
& Kristi shows me a video
of a possum doing the same
thing, slubbing a pillow
that smells like his mom
until the wildlife
rehabber pries him
gently but firmly
away. The other day I
tried to pray but
my mouth wouldn’t form
Hail
. Probably too low.
All seriousness, though
do you let ice
from the sky
hold your tongue?
Why not? (One
long, hideous thought
I have kept
to myself: what if I’ve been
good enough
cue
drums the whole time?)