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Heaven

Nick DePascal on

Published in Poem Of The Day

The pigeons ignore us gently as we
scream at one another in the parking
lot of an upscale grocer. The cicadas
are numbed by their own complaints,
so numbed I won't even try to describe
the noise and tenor of their hum, but hum
they do like a child humming with his
fingers in his ears. Which, coincidentally,
is what our son is doing. Red shopping
carts crash together, and even the humans
walking by do so dumbly, as if to say,
no comment. As if two red-faced adults
in tears is as common as the polluted air
they breathe and keep reading about in
Time and Newsweek, but are clueless
as to what to do about it. Is this why we're
separating our recycling by glass, by plastic,
by paper? Or why we're buying organic
produce at a place that smells like patchouli
and port-o-potties? I ask you. Pigeons scoot,
and finches hop, and cicadas shout and shed
themselves into loose approximations of what
we might have in a different time called heaven.


About this poem
"'Heaven' is interested in examining a seemingly mundane occurrence-a couple fighting in a parking lot-and unpacking its absurd and beautiful details and possibilities. What, if anything, does this situation have to say about 'big' issues? What if everything-everything-is really contained in these smallest of moments?"
-Nick DePascal

About Nick DePascal
Nick DePascal is the author of "Before You Become Improbable" (West End Press, 2014). He teaches at the University of New Mexico and Santa Fe University of Art and Design and lives in Albuquerque, New Mexico.


***
The Academy of American Poets is a nonprofit, mission-driven organization, whose aim is to make poetry available to a wider audience. Email The Academy at poem-a-day[at]poets.org.


(c) 2014 Nick DePascal. Originally published by the Academy of American Poets, www.poets.org. Distributed by King Features Syndicate




 


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