CHRIS BANKS
Olympus Mons
In the movies, satellites in outer space sweep across
the exosphere of our planet, blink red, make sounds
like a truck backing up, a lie told by sound editors
since sound carries by vibrating air molecules, and
no air floats in space, so I guess this is my way of
breaking it to you I canceled my pioneering flight
to Mars. I would much rather scream into the void
on Earth, than a vacuum of empty ether in space,
and where would I put my beach glass collection?
Too many things I would miss. The flowering of
crabapple trees in Spring. The scent of rain, and
a green city park. Little things. Toothpaste spat
into a sink. Paying too much for a Maccciato.
The squish of sand and ocean foaming between
toes. Ordinary men and women, too. Not ones
with degrees in astrophysics who gladly squeeze
breakfast from a tube. Real people with real fears
who carry their anxieties like Sisyphus up the hill
then trudge down, only to do it again tomorrow.
Accidents, illness, pain, malfeasance, misfortune.
People with a fear of darkness, without actually
floating around a spaceship in it. People tethered
to the smallest, most ordinary of daily miracles:
a hummingbird’s whirring, a sunset lighting up
clouds the colour of cotton candy, the laughter
of two small children bouncing in a trampoline
in a neighbour’s yard. What might I say if I found
myself walking the red dust canyons, dry lake beds,
extinct volcanoes of Mars? If I found myself alone
on the summit of Olympus Mons, sixteen miles
above the planet, I would say Home. I miss home.
