THERE IS YET TIME
We stand together in great darkness some distance
apart on the beach to wait for sunrise. First a hint
of not-quite night, a mirage perhaps, whisper
of color, blue maybe, maybe. A pastel hush
of lavender in a skyward streak that a moment
ago was not there. The sand is hard as a sidewalk.
My toes and fingers sting in the eye-watering wind.
Laced ice kisses the shore. An apricot-orange stripe
appears as a reward. Being human, we want more:
to cheer, applaud. Instead, slate-gray clouds blur
the horizon. Those who’d come for evidence
that, forget yesterday, today is another, return
disappointed, to their cars. I get it. And I’m also relieved
when they leave like guests after the party is over.
The beach belongs to me and my dog, who wants
her stick thrown again. Fetch, return, the point of life
being whatever is happening now—a botched sunrise
on Lake Michigan as a winter storm rolls in. It’s the peril
and cringe of exposure, the balm and dread of being alone.
It’s the squirm and scrape and ache of making selfish
choices. I cannot be the only one with a voice inside
that says, “I don’t have to,” after I’ve already said I would.
I think I believe there is not enough of me to share.
What if I’m wrong?
Maybe that is why I am restive as a cloud churning
hot and cold, braced for lightning.