in this new world, the one we attend
upon arriving from our funerals,
it becomes clear that we are not
unified on how we choose our passions:
at times in our lives we were guided to things
that were in and of themselves pleasurable to us,
while sometimes we were taken by the comfort
of filling holes in ourselves, and the things
with which we filled a hole meant less to us
than that the hole was filled, even for a moment,
even though we knew we would be empty again,
and that we’d look for that filling again.
so, while the love of food for some was honest love for
the oil of cured olives fat on our lips, or for the rosemary sprig
pulled through the teeth and savored for its burned
and its bitter, for some of us all that mattered
was how eating capped the dry well inside us, and the flavor
of anything was secondary to how feeding
forced hunger back into its cave, so we fed often
and unwisely, not heeding the taste or the joy in tasting.
each of those backward passions often led to another:
the yearning for sex stopped up our lust, the lust was a way
to stop the indifference to our own lives, indifference a stop to loneliness,
loneliness a way to hold off surrender to the larger urge to bond.
in the new world we are not that fragile, not as subject
to the whim of the vacant moment. we see the others as admirable,
complete before now, brought here to validate the holy pleasing
of pleasure as its own end. the first good day of wholeness has come for us —
but in the remnants of our old minds we wonder: was there something
to be said for those of us who were never full, always expecting the next best thing
to come and make us whole while still in full life, and did we learn something
in that search that the others did not see? did we not fill them
with the fruits of our searching? we made the things that made them
happy — the books, the songs, even the food. we were the people
who they met and loved without imagining the depth of our desire
to just roll over and fall asleep, content not just for once but for always.
it doesn’t matter now. in the new world, we do not invent reasons
to seek what is in front of us. we pull grapes into our mouths and
are happy to settle for just one, believing that perfection is always present…
still, to some of us it is unfortunate that the next one cannot possibly be better.

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