Somewhere Else
I was born in the early evening
behind an old door at the end
of autumn.
Imagine a woman with child.
A mouthful of hair.
A fist forming.
A stone bathtub & a rough sink.
Thick paste of salt
& cold
applied directly to
the stain.
Blue eyes.
A collective
gasp.
The hardwood ladder
leaning
against
the shadow of dead cells
nightgowned
in moon.
*
I was raised
in the surrounding grass-covered ruins
between
rhubarb & riverine.
When I was a child
there were no words for this cool
simplicity,
collapsing
over time.
When the water was low
think:
field created by lightning
kaleidoscope of back
& forth.
Imagine:
its voice
more like a chorus.
Its sudden squall.
Digging
the fossils
that drowned
trying to
reach us.
Copyright © 2023 by Adam J. Gellings. Originally published in Poem-a-Day on October 16, 2023, by the Academy of American Poets.