Getting Free

My long-dead ex-husband’s wife died this week.

That much I know. What else? She told

no one she was sick, didn’t go to the doctor,

finally collapsed more or less alone

into the Bermuda Triangle of her own wishes.

Why would someone want to disappear before she

disappears? I will never know this, either. Things

feel like my fault, my deliberate lack of attention.

We cast ourselves out of our lives,

there’s a crumbling at the edge of what we know,

a bit of satisfaction, as if we’d left shore with its

factories and smells, and climbed the mast.

Nothing in sight but horizon and fresh air.

We take in a breath, a breath made of elemental

parts of a thousand thousand souls we’ll never

get rid of, that will be reincarnated into innumerable

more life forms until the sun and earth die a cold

death a few billion years from now.

But that won’t be the end

for those atoms, even the atoms of those

we left with anguish and tears, even those we

turned around in the driveway for, to hear their

pleading to try again. Nearby supernova will shock

and stir the dusty remnants of the solar system

and new solar systems will form around it.

Some of the atoms will make up the bodies

of newborn life forms on the new planets.

Many of my own atoms may have been part of

alien organisms that lived on some long-ago-

destroyed planet. I am sad for them,

the ones who live forever ignored in me,

and the ones who’d longed to get free.