Meandering Mind in Global Environment
Professor Day is drawing drainage
basins on the board, little rills
and gullies. The squiggles and flows
are cupped by black borders, other
land, and the whole thing like a lung
or tongue or lung-tongue, capillaries
kissing.
Now it’s a hot air balloon, the mouth
the basket I never stepped into,
the free ride I always missed
at the Derby breakfast: only up
then down, but still up, still floating
like petals in Albuquerque.
Now: an exclamation mark in bubble
lettering. Excitement is wrinkled but wide
at its noggin. Deep in its delta it makes
a good point. Close tight, it says. Contain
me. Keep me endorheic.
On the other side of the board,
a set of teeth drawn to explain Q:
stream discharge. Discharge. I can’t
help feeling 14, panties wet with foreign
white goo from my coochie-coo. Then
thinking: the earth is premenstrual,
eventually floods. Hey Aunt Flo!
And this stream! So horny! It loves
the rub of erosion. The action is
hydraulic. There are cliffs, waterfalls.
Plunge into this pool with me, it says.
Let’s get lost in our own forces.
Back on board one, there are two snakes
zagging in place of erased excitement.
Their bellies touch, merge, widen. Water swirls
and swirls. I swirl into you testing my pressure
points, grabbing just below my heart racing
hipbone. Me, in giggling fits. You, too seriously,
Have you ever wanted to say I love you?
There is too much swirl, chaos, struggle
for equilibrium: the water moves too quickly.
I cut off, I’m sorry, babe. I’m not cut out for this.
Streams’ grazing elbows separate: oxbow lakes.
Oxbow lakes. Alone. Still. Pushing. Oxbow lakes
won’t let themselves be loved. There is ringing,
ringing. The bell is ringing.