Moons of Jupiter
I.
I never asked for this kingdom,
yet here it is, a quiet tumult of stone and gas,
silent except for the distant rush of Jupiter's voice.
It is not a god, but it believes it is
and what is belief but the force that pulls us
toward what we can never touch?
Europa, you are quiet as a wound,
your seas frozen in prayer,
your salt and water like an elegy for a world
that never was. I touch your surface
with my mind and hear nothing back.
It is cold there, colder than distance.
II.
Io burns with fury,
volcanic, restless, as if
the planet's anger had found a voice,
a way to speak its molten song.
In the night sky, Io is a bright wound,
a burst of flame against the darkness,
its suffering beautiful because we do not live there.
Who could endure such fire
and not be destroyed?
But Io continues,
burning as if the heart of it
is made of loss.
III.
Callisto, what did you see in the first darkness
that made you so still?
Your craters are soft, as if the universe
has forgotten your name,
yet you remember everything.
Ice is your memory,
the deep record of your suffering,
etched in every frozen scar.
You are the quiet one,
but I hear you,
the long sigh of a body that has borne too much.
IV.
Ganymede, larger than a moon should be,
you outsize yourself,
a burden of rock and light,
your gravity pulling us into your orbit
as if love could be like this,
a vast and silent pull.
Yet there is no comfort in your embrace,
only the cold certainty of distance.
The poets wrote songs to you once,
but I have forgotten them.
Your beauty has no place here.
V.
And all the others, unnamed,
too small to remember or too far to see—
they circle too, part of the vastness,
each one a fragment of something
we will never know.
There is no end to this turning.
We are bound, as they are bound,
to the great silence that keeps us.
Even the smallest among them knows
what it means to be held
and not touched.
VI.
Jupiter hums,
a low, endless song that the moons cannot hear,
though they are made of its music.
It is the song of things turning,
of orbits that never break,
of longing that never ends.
Jupiter does not speak.
It only listens,
and the moons, like all of us,
do what they must,
moving endlessly in the dark.
Pica
I was always told
what the body needs, it seeks—
but this is not hunger
as you would understand it.
The mouth takes in dirt,
its bitter metallic edge,
not to satisfy,
but to speak to the emptiness
that will not answer.
In the garden, I kneel
with my hands in the soil.
The earth smells of rain and iron,
and still I cannot stop.
I lift stones to my lips
as if they might tell me
something I’ve forgotten.
There are things I consume
that leave no trace,
yet the body remembers:
a strand of hair,
a sliver of paint—
like the voices
I heard once in dreams
but never understood.
I say it is a longing,
but it is more like silence.
And I wait for the day
when nothing will be enough
to fill me.
Sisyphus, reversing.
Imagine Sisyphus descending,
not with the rock above him,
but beneath, rolling down
the slope he has mastered,
a quiet unwinding of effort.
The stone, now obedient,
moves by its own weight,
as if the mountain has softened,
as if gravity has shifted
to let him rest.
At first, he does not trust it,
the ease with which the burden
rolls away, a quiet betrayal
of the endless task. He reaches
for the familiar struggle,
the steady pull against the incline,
but his hands grasp air,
and the mountain releases him.
Downward he goes,
feet light as the rock
gathers speed behind him,
no longer his to control,
and in the absence of the climb,
he feels the absence of meaning,
the loss of that daily fight
that once gave shape
to his endless days.
What is the point of release,
if there is nothing left to push,
nothing to lean against
in the long, burning light?
The gods laugh, perhaps,
not with cruelty, but with pity,
for now he must confront
the hollow space
where his purpose once lived.
He reaches the bottom,
where the rock rests,
silent and still. It asks nothing
of him anymore. And there,
in the quiet, he wonders:
if the struggle made him whole,
who is he now without it?
The absence of effort is its own
kind of burden, a strange
freedom that weighs
heavier than the stone.
He sits beside it,
unsure if this is peace
or just another kind of punishment.
For in the letting go,
he finds no answers,
only the echo of what it meant
to push and fail and rise again.
Now, in the stillness,
he must learn to live
with the silence that follows
the end of the climb.
Bravo!!! What stunning poetry! So original and fresh! Very interesting subjects! You are so talented!!! 👏👏👏😻😍😍😍
Loved this one