a descent into poetry insanity |
I. One morning, I stepped into an airport, and after thirteen hours, three planes, and two more airports, I emerged in another country, and it was morning again. II. Travelers exist in between. Planes, trains, automobiles—their denizens careen off each other in passing. sharing secrets and fears, and then abandoning those new relationships for real life again. III. Once, while on a road trip, we slept in Dallas, then drove all day, passing and being passed by the same cars, nearly running out of gas twice, and after eight hours of oil fields and tumbleweeds, we were still in Texas. IV. I saw a movie once, set on a train meandering through Europe, and the conductor asked for passports twice in two minutes while traveling through Luxembourg. That never happens on a plane. The flight attendant never asks for passports and stamps: Canada, Greenland, Russia, Ireland as we pass through different airspace. Of course, the train rolls over sovereign soil, its passengers in contact, however brief, with the land, passing over invisible boundaries made of politicking and imagination without moving their feet or changing their conversation. Is the air less sovereign, then? V. Once, while on a train, I met a girl and, after hours of conversation, drifted away. I dream her life, or maybe, she dreams me. line count: 40 April 16: plane, train, or automobile |