DNA
Time also a helix tightening or loosening
the material from which we’re made. Just
think how things oppose each other—sense
and anti-sense, death and rebirth the same year,
father gone, the floating messengers inside us
transcribing the past. Sister beginning to unravel
a broken phosphate that is suddenly a dream of
windows blown in, curtains fluttering. Dark
separates from the light like an oil: a bad day
in the third grade now a voluble history, mute
matter looping back as memory and intrusion.
Think of her other dreams, all her teeth gone,
a child in her arms, then her arms suddenly empty,
she’s kneeling in church, her kerchief askew, her
boyfriend at the apartment passed out in the bedroom.
She tries to sing as if music were coming up
out of the kitchen drain, this her art making
and being made, her left-handed spiral offering
its song, where love and the lost child and fear
are a triple-stranded moment still twisting among
the clouds in an unspeakable distance that every
morning is so near.