Each Sound

Beginnings are brutal, like this accident

of stars colliding, mute explosions

of colorful gases, the mist and dust

that would become our bodies

hurling through black holes, rising,

muck ridden, from pits of tar and clay.

Back then it was easy to have teeth,

claw our way into the trees — it was

accepted, the monkeys loved us, sat

on their red asses clapping and laughing.

We’ve forgotten the luxury of dumbness,

how once we crouched naked on an outcrop

of rock, the moon huge and untouched

above us, speechless. Now we talk

about everything, incessantly,

our moans and grunts turned on a spit

into warm vowels and elegant consonants.

We say plethora, demitasse, ozone and love.

We think we know what each sound means.

There are times when something so joyous

or so horrible happens our only response

is an intake of breath, and then

we’re back at the truth of it,

that ball of life expanding

and exploding on impact, our heads,

our chests, filled with that first

unspeakable light.