January

Time to practice. Midwinter, your heart’s clock
slows down. Your eye won’t labor for small treasures,
ignoring the velvety depth of gray, fretwork
of branches against the sky. It’s easy to open up in April,
young sun, one blooming thing after another
until you forget the casualties. And October’s feast,
showers of red on the street, gold on the table.
Now chilled bursts of air cuff your face
and you say January’s a brutalist. I say, a master class.
Out of the numbed-down life. Live at a child’s pace,
dream in the languid streams of raw light.
Sprays of berries drape winter greens.
They won’t last long. Neither do we for that matter.
But for a minute, be a fledgling in a breath-stopping
world. I’m not brave, just imagine wilder places,
as if I might actually go. Like the Arctic north,
stripped of illusion. It could undo the schooling
to brush off extinction, whether we survive this world.
No remorse, it kills with unbearable beauty.

- from Leave Me a Little Want