Poetry

“The Time of Our Lives,” “The Geography of Absence,” and “Conundrum”

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Image from Kseniya Lapteva for Unsplash+

The Time of Our Lives

We live

in the future,

 

but only

for a moment.

 

Instead,

what we really want

 

is the past,

fully realized,

 

the way

we remember it,

 

different

than it was.

 

Now, the days run

together,

 

a watercolor

of one hue, one brushstroke.

 

We desire

our next future

 

to be new,

yet familiar,

 

an echo,

a refrain.

The Geography of Absence

It is defined

by what is not

 

on the landscape,

a sneaking

 

suspicion that there

was something

 

just a moment ago.

Important things may

 

have happened here,

marked only by the faint outline

 

of loss, perhaps

a slight rise, a slight

 

depression in the earth.

The map of absence

 

has a key,

measured out

 

in the degrees of emptiness,

a sliding scale

 

which varies

for each of us.

Conundrum

It was

a child’s

conundrum.

 

Conundrum,

a weighty word

we all learned

 

later, after childhood.

A puzzle. We could not

imagine a ton

 

of goose down feathers

not being lighter

than a ton of the hardest,

 

brightest gold.

We could hear

the metal’s solid ring

 

and see how

the feathers

instead would

 

whisper and float.

We knew that

a ton of gold

 

could crush us

flatter than

a pancake.

 

Instead, we’d take

the ton of feathers,

soft and falling

 

like the red and yellow

leaves we threw back

into the autumn air.

 

A ton of feathers

would caress and smother us

like the fattest of blankets,

 

or like so many pillows

we couldn’t even

begin to count.

About the Author

John Peter Beck

Raised in a milltown on Lake Michigan in Michigan's Upper Peninsula, John Peter Beck is a recently retired professor in the labor education program at Michigan State University where he still co-directs a program that focuses on labor history and the culture of the workplace, Our Daily Work/Our Daily Lives. His poetry has been published in a number of journals including The Seattle Review, Another Chicago Magazine, The Louisville Review and Passages North among others.