Being Treated as Dead
How tribal it feels, like being shunned
by Amish, shown the dirt
road out from a Pilgrim town,
forbidden to place a last offering
of flowers in a palm leaf
basket at the village shrine
in Bali. But even a family
of two sisters is a tribe.
A radioactive horse between us
couldn’t decay fast enough
for us to outlive its halflives.
She disowned me, left me
for dead, like a daughter
of Orthodox Jews who marries
a goy. Did she sit shiva,
cover mirrors? Does she light
yahrzeit candles? I’m wearing
a shroud, so can’t understand
how she can still send cards
for Christmas and my birthday,
containing still more cards entitling
me to free coffee. Is she buying
time? Will I be dead only for
a decade, like an ostracized
Athenian official? If life,
as a Buddhist teacher said,
boils down to three words,
not always so, do I try to detach
from both hope and fear?
I feel like Schrödinger’s cat,
condemned to remain
both dead and alive, or half
of an entangled pair of sub-atomic
particles that can’t unknow each other,
from any distance. After thirty
years of not speaking
to her sister, our dying
mother said, This is silly
I should call her, but didn’t.
Constellations revolve, above
and below the horizon.
Tracked by stars, malign
and kind—before death,
who can say what’s final?
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