It Flew Up Out of the Dark
{a meditation on depression}

I’m afraid of it the way
Harry Potter is afraid
of Voldemort- no,
the way the others can’t even
say his name.
.
I am not conscious for months
at a time, alert system sleeping
like the lazy, blinking red light
in the front window of my car when it’s parked,
going nowhere
.
and then-
I’ll be reading in bed or
out at dinner with friends or
staring into space with unfinished work
on my hands and
.
and it happens like thinking,
oh,
this dread, this pinprick of
unpleasantness, this rolling-over
my stomach enacts like a lame dog.
.
I don’t move, because if I wait it out
it might leave, might
drift out the window like an almost-
case of carbon monoxide poisoning:
nothing to see here (until it’s too
late).
.
They’ll ask, disbelieving, how it
got me.
was I taking all my pills and potions?
did I exercise three times a week?
did I drink enough water, get enough
sleep? (yes, yes, yes, yes)
.
They’ll want to blame me because
I was the only one there at the time.
But it is not that the receptors
in my brain slept on the job.
they may have merely drifted from
their posts for one, two
seconds too long
.
and even if they hadn’t,
even if all the molecules in my
breathing body tried
their damn best-
maybe it was just biding its time
wherever it went off to,
sleeping like a thick black smog
on a jungle floor-
until it saw the slightest crack from
on high, and pounced.
here it is,
and there I was.
it’s not under the bed or in
the closet:
.
it flew up out of the dark,
and still their questioning makes me
feel like a failure,
like if I only listened hard enough,
for a second maybe, I could have heard
the leathery beat of its
wings.
About the Creator
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