A SMALL BOY, A MOUSE, AND THE UNIVERSE
What do you say
when he asks about death?
He wants to know what will happen
to his toys.
There's no use in complicating
things
before he can understand,
if he ever can.
I tell him
he can take them with him.
Heavens, the Pharaohs
thought they could take
their boats, their staffs,
and their gold masks with them.
The three great pyramids
are a map of the belt of Orion
where they must have hoped they
were going.
Even Neanderthals placed a stone
at the head of their dead.
Is a mouse alive? Yes.
Is Moma alive? Yes.
Is a rocket alive? Yes.
No, a rocket is a machine
that enables us to soar.
A leaf? Yes. A bed? No.
What's alive has juice.
Yet a poem is a machine
juicy with words and emotions.
It's common to complain
that life is short.
Yes, if you compare it
to the age of the universe.
But our life is somewhere
in the middle,
longer than a year, a day, a cell,
a quark,
longer than a chronon,
ten to the minus fortieth power.
When you get old,
do you lose your juice?
Do you lose lightyears?
Yes, I tell him,
you are the winner.
I accentuate the positive
to keep the juices flowing and the
light on.
No, I tell him, I'm not going to
die
like a t-rex.
It is all a lie
to keep him joyful.
I hear the mousetrap
crack its machine.
In the morning he will want to
see
the blood and the head guillotined.
Is he alive? Yes,
and learning success
expects success.
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