As in, if
the people there like everyone, even
the ones
they are not related to, if they like
strangers
and budding plants, like to hum the songs
in each
other’s heads, like food
too much to
chew it, and too much not
to share, if
they like to be alive
more than to
bomb or be bombed, like
visitors,
like thirst, like letting it last
ten extra
minutes to boost the thrill of water,
brush their
mouths with baking soda
so their
next drink tastes sweet, if their games
do not name
winners and losers, if no
one must
deadbolt a door behind them in fear,
if no child
or adult hears, I did not invite you
to my party, if people do not exchange
paper and
say, This paper is worth
so many’s unhappiness, if no
night
outlasts a day, if no
one
oversleeps for sadness, or if
they do,
someone—it’s a network
better than
any antiquated phone tree—
lies atop
the quilt beside the sleeper and waits,
matching
their inhales and exhales,
and
no one wakes alone.
So far away
and so down
here, we’re
all rooting for you,
astronaut.
We squint toward your ship,
which must
be—must be—
traveling
somewhere overhead.
We rise from
these creaky beds
in our empty
rooms
and stretch the curtains wide.
Brad Aaron Modlin’s poetry has been the text for orchestral scores; the springboard for an NYC art exhibition; and the focus of both an episode of The Slowdown with U.S. Poet Laureate Ada Limón and the premier episode of Poetry Unbound from public radio’s On Being Studios. Brad’s book Everyone at This Party Has Two Names won The Cowles Poetry Prize and features the poem “What You Missed That Day You Were Absent from Fourth Grade.”
“To the Astronaut Who Hopes Life on Another Planet Will Be More Bearable,” was a finalist in the CBC Poetry Prize (cbc.ca) and is part of his next manuscript. Brad has participated in residencies with the Banff Centre, Artscape Toronto Island, and Biophilium in Gatineau. He wrote/read/sang a poem for a concert with Symphony Nova Scotia and stayed on key. A creative writing professor, he teaches/learns with undergraduate and graduate students. BradAaronModlin.com
the Tuesday poem is curated by rob mclennan
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