Saturday, January 8, 2022

Empty Pockets

 


Qualicum Beach


An oceanside RV park
in Parksville, Vancouver Island

This week, the ocean roared,  huge waves
swallowing whole beaches, right up into
RV parks and private lawns.
"It's happening," I thought. They said
it would be fifteen years until
the water level along the shores
would rise.

On this Island, Parksville beaches flooded.
On the mainland, the seawall and Kitsilano beach
disappeared under the waves.

The news keeps floating the fantasy
that these extreme weather events
are each one-time occurrences.
After each flood, people begin mopping up,
as if the only possibility we know
is this one step at a time, one day at a time
moving forward
through accelerating crisis.

Every living thing is imbued
with its own determination
to survive
its circumstances.

We are reaching into empty pockets,
the poet said.

Yet in spite of rising seas,
and melting ice floes,
in spite of landslides
and floods that swallow whole towns,
hope finds us. We hold fast
to the belief that, despite our ennui
and stubborn denial,
there is still time,
all evidence to the contrary,
to unite and find a way
to save this melting 
and imploding world.

Inspired by Some Tomorrow by Maya Stein. The italicized phrase is hers.

2 comments:

  1. I hope we all come to our senses SOON! Climate change is real. Weather extremes are wreaking havoc everywhere. I don't want my children and grandchildren to have to try to survive in a world that's become uninhabitable. Thanks for this poem, Sherry--and thanks for you! Happy 2022 (despite all the daily climate horrors).

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  2. There is still time but, we must act sooner than later. Our planet is changing. Survival will be harder on the coastlines. There are too many storms. Today, it is sleeting and freezing rains. Too dangerous to go outside.

    Yes, my friend hold on to the hope!

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