The Physiology of Joy
In the bleakest centers of the body, researchers
have discovered tiny pockets of joy,
like the undersized bubbles that cling
to the corners of parched mouths.
We're trying to understand, the spokesman said.
He was string into the camera. They might be
an immune system response to pain
or evidence that joy
in order to be released
must coalesce to a critical mass.
The he leaned into our living room
to confide
that in his college anatomy class,
sometimes the bodies would sigh
at the end of a long dissection,
an unaccountable flutter under his hands.
Once he was last one out
of that blue gymnasium of a laboratory.
I don't know if it's proof, he said,
but when I switched off the lights
the transom windows glowed.
Kathleen Flenniken is the current Washington State Poet Laureate. As part of the 2012 Get Lit! Festival, she will be visiting a local elementary school to share her passion for poetry. She will also be reading her work as part of the Poetry Salon on Friday, April 14 at 9:00 p.m. at the Rocket Bakery.
1 comment:
To each their own; my own it's not.
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