MEESH MONTOYA
  • Home
  • Fiction
  • Poetry
  • Blog

Notes for a poem about a solar eclipse.

4/10/2024

 
I can’t remember the last time I threw my head back like this.
The cardboard black-lensed frames are supposed to go over your glasses
but they don’t fit over my gigantic hexagonal frames,
which are gigantic on purpose
because I need their prisms to compensate for the
fourth cranial nerve palsy
that causes me, has always caused me
to see double,
and the bigger the frames,
the more of my field of vision they correct.

There’s already a poem somewhere
about how my first lesson in existentialism came at age 5
when I learned that not everyone
sees a transparent and movable facsimile
of the object on which their eyes focus
when they tilt their head a certain way.
Just me.

Anyway, NASA only says you should put the eclipse glasses
over your regular glasses
and I don’t have an astronomer on speed-dial
to ask whether I have to hold the things over my glasses
for the length of the whole production, or if
it’s safe to wear them underneath.
I don’t really know the mysterious physics of eclipses,
don’t really know how it all works, but
I picture a pipsqueak with a magnifying glass
harnessing the sun to incinerate ants to death,
except the ants are my eyes.

So I figure I’ll just take off my prescription glasses
and wear the things properly.
My eyesight is pretty clear, all things considered,
so it’s okay to take the specs off for about the length of a shower
without causing an eye-strain headache.
I go up to the roof of my office in Long Island City,
take my glasses off
and put on this UV-friendly masquerade mask,
something I won’t have a reason to do for another forty years
(if I make it that long.)

These ersatz glasses are 100,000 times stronger
​than regular sunglasses.
So most of what you see is black.
In the center there is a bright orange crescent
like a fat waxing cracker dipped in melted cheddar. 

It’s a neat trick, 
these celestial bodies suspended in a cosmic dance,
but it doesn’t really warrant the hype.

But wait– 
the double.
Just below and off to the left is a carbon copy,
and as I move it moves with me.
And unlike when I’m looking straight ahead,
when I’m looking up at the sky like this
I can spin and spin and the double never disappears,
only dances,
the real helio remaining centric all the while.
I have gone from disability to superpower in the time it takes
for Clark Kent to transform with the power of accessories.

Here I am, an important adult among important adults
all thronged together with our advanced degrees
everyone stationary, staring at the sky,
and me here twirling round and round
in the kind of twirls only little girls in flowy skirts understand. 
Twirling so that the second eclipse revolves around the real one
which stays put in the middle
like it’s the actual damn sun, which it is.
Twirling, amazed that even for a moment I forgot 
what my own body can do.

The path of totality is just to the west.
Like death it always seems to miss me by a hair.
Somewhere else there are people taking off the glasses
and looking directly at the sun’s luminous corona
framing a black orb.

But I’m fine right where I am.
I don’t feel like I’m missing anything.
Because what could be more spectacular than your very own
built-in kaleidoscope sitting on either side of your nose?
Here I am,
in love with my lazy eyes.

This can’t be a poem. It’s too obvious. 
Garish, bursting with its own symbolism
like an overripe mango,
like a cartoon rabbit with an oversized mallet,
like the image of god on your toast,
like a total eclipse.

    Meesh Montoya

    You read my blog.
    Prepare to die.

    Archives

    February 2025
    April 2024
    July 2023
    June 2023
    May 2023
    September 2022
    July 2022
    February 2022
    September 2021
    August 2021
    May 2021
    February 2021
    September 2020
    June 2020
    February 2020
    June 2019
    May 2019
    March 2019
    January 2019
    September 2018
    August 2018
    July 2018
    June 2018
    May 2018
    April 2018
    March 2018

    Categories

    All
    Carbon Footprint
    Climate Change
    Cryptocolonialism
    Disability
    Healing
    Judaism
    Manspreading
    Man Vs. Nature
    #metoo
    Nail Salons
    Plastic
    Poetry
    Puerto Rico
    Regret
    #strawban
    Teshuva
    #timesup
    U.S. Currency
    Yamim Nora'im

    RSS Feed

Home

Poetry

Fiction

Blog

Contact

  • Home
  • Fiction
  • Poetry
  • Blog