California Dreamin’
I could see it all from that room:
the fog-capped mountains piercing
the midnight blue, out where the dish
points up like the ground’s silver thumb,
the evening’s blinking red eye. I can’t
remember if it was before or after
the wildfires, the night the sky was so full
of crows, it was as if they had been summoned
by our sorrow. If you live in California
long enough, everything is before
or after a fire, everything bordering
phosphorous. Some days I woke
to the Bay burning and it was just
another Wednesday. That fall
I watched the sky choke sienna
and all I could do was log into class.
This June, a coast away, smoke
comes from the north and everyone I love
is asking how I’m handling the air’s ocher coat
– all I can say is it's fine. What do you want
from me? It’s all so familiar, the ash
staining our clothes and peppering my hair.
Everything is burning and people want to know
how I’m handling it. I’m not. I want to help
but I have tuition to pay. I’m doing what I can.
I’m blowing out my candles before bed.
I’m tucking my matches where I’ll forget
they exist. I’m asking God for a storm
that will shatter the sky into submission,
the clouds huddled into one gray,
ethereal mass, a ghostly wall rolling
inland to swallow our stupor. Thunder
so strong I feel it in the pit of my chest,
every car alarm for miles, wailing.