The Untouchable Windchime

Susan Brennan

There’s a wind chime on the front doorknob

and I feel like I can’t remove it.

Who knows who put it there

keeping a sleeping Self safe

or listening for the lover to come home.

I don’t know why I need anything

in a right way.

Why I have to believe in an

alphabetical anything;

the bills must be filed

the books on the shelf

pasta boxes standing upright.

Will something always reoccur?

The rain is saying this has never

reoccurred – this falling towards you

right now

this wash, this blessing

this unafraid to say.

Tethered to daily

I can hardly believe the lightning;

its tenacious fingers

scratch open the wind

ionize the flowers.

A tree cracks downward and the whole street

is out.

I spent the afternoon hammering a two-step stool

following directions

though they were sparce and withholding.

I hardly know where those

two steps will lead me:

will there be voices?

will I hire a night watchman?

will I close in on the Northern Lights?

Those erratic phosphorescent smears

sloppy love letters from the Sun.

And will I get it unright this time

sturdy and stepping up

into dark

 

Susan Brennan is a poet, screenwriter and activist. Her poems can be found in her chapbooks and book, Blue Sirens (Dancing Girl Press), numinous (Finishing Line Press), and Drunken Oasis (Rattapallax Press) and various publications. She curates poetry programming (WanderWord) at Wilco’s Solid Sound Music Festival, MASS MoCA. With a circus-arts company, she co-produced and staged her poem Chromoluminarism about Georges Seurat’s final painting (RGB NYC). She has written film scripts, a one million hit plus award winning web-series, pitched film stories, and co-produced a short film, of which have premiered at Austin, Venice and Tribeca Film Festivals, as well as a screening at MoMA. Being a part of Lotus's Spring Clover Edition has her feeling sassy through and through. See what she’s up to at www.tinycubesofice.com.

Read more poems by Susan Brennan here →