Notes for the Yangtze River Dolphin

on loss and the ache for reunion

It is the time of year for going through piles of papers, old things, deciding what to keep. A form of god-play, one might say, over the kingdom of objects. A way to regain some control. They say you have to let the clutter go to welcome new life in.

My kind does a lot of staring at the moon this time of year. At small fires. The small fires on screens, too—photos and other things. Some called news.

I don’t remember you being a headline during my childhood. But your species had been collapsing my entire life, and by the time I reached adulthood, the last of you—named Cheech, by his keepers—died after twenty-two years in captivity. There were assorted, unverified sightings after that. Then not. Then your kind was declared functionally extinct.

Yours was the last of your line to survive from ancient times. The first dolphin species erased by human activity.

The loss was met with inaudible sighs and a quiet dread. Mostly unsaid: there was so much more to lose, at this rate. The heart began to encase itself in concrete, give itself over to gravity. Many sank. Others practiced a form of magical thinking in desperate resistance. It was, of course, a magical thinking that had brought us here—without you.

A magical thinking, too, that invokes this us as a known entity: small, penitent, childlike. When it feels more ambient than that. More like sewer steam.

Anyway, I am watching it now, noticing with some embarrassment how it persists. How I haven’t quite abandoned the stubborn hope that you are flipping around elsewhere, in safer waters.

How loud the river traffic must have been to your sensitive ears. You could hardly see; your ears did almost everything. Too much sound, and not enough of what you knew. The waters receded, sullied by runoff and waste. You couldn’t hear anyone you knew anymore.

I like to think that you felt some surprise—after retreating to colder, clearer waters to die—when you found another like you, doing the same. That you found a way, in spite of it all.

I suppose I got this idea from the whales. The way whole pods went missing awhile back, only to be discovered later to have moved. It’s still not clear where—only that they found a way to protect their most vulnerable, away.

My kind is known to anthropomorphize. To look to you and other creatures, seen and unseen, for clues. Some of us are always looking for clues. How to live here. How to stay. How to leave and yet remain. What to do when the senses are flooded with noise; when the others go; when new noise replaces them; when the waste of this other us comes rushing in and the living your kind was meant for is sullied, receding.

It’s nearing the winter solstice as I write this. Near the time for calling back the sun. It’s an expression now. I can think of no ceremonies I’ve witnessed where this was done in earnest. I can only imagine—summoning what magical thinking I have left—what it would mean to do this well.

How the faithful practitioner—an elder, likely, with all assembled—would have to believe. In the desperation of the dark, how bereft they would be if it were final.

No one seems to know what to do about our moon, which they say is leaving, too.

You would have to call with something larger. Another, vaster us. And mean it—from crown to toes. You would have to empty yourself first, to feel it pouring in: the rushing out from sky to earth, and then some other, unnamed rushing in.

You would have to hold the space between the emptying and whatever comes next. To feel the full ache of the loss. To sing in earnest, with all assembled, to summon the best of your life back into being.

You would have to believe in return. Not as abstraction, but as heat. As light. As the sun itself.

And you would have to call for it the way you call for a love that is leaving.

To kneel, the absurd husk of you. To be astonished by what it might still contain. To cry a deep, guttural note into the cold air—a sustained sound, calling:

come back.

minor astronomies

in a hum preceding form

This exhibit resists classification.
It bruises the instruments, leaving
a threshold where witness, wound,
and world converge.

The directive is clear: verify.
Yet time slips in these chambers,
and certain absences carry weight
enough to tilt the field.

Something crossed the perimeter
and refused erasure.

To write it now means
standing in the residue of that crossing,
the hum rising through the floor,
the slight pressure in the skull
marking nearness.

Some archives keep objects.
This one keeps the fracture—
whatever touched the world
and left it changed.

The record ends
at the limit of language.

give me a web

to reject another tired hero’s story

Yes, I see those stories, too, all around me. The location and abundance of which some will exclaim, “are everywhere!” 

No matter where I go, the one that interests me most is not a story, for it is made of what would not be recognized as such. It tends to feature a non-hero whose non-feats go unnoticed by being what they are–– more constant labors, and no less common than the fact of the web appearing between the branches of the fig tree overnight. 

Many of those who  proclaim most loudly that stories are everywhere! are in fact looking for the same story––as anyone armed with hammers for hands, might learn to see only nails. This much-sought-after tale is another version of the hero with his labors, slaying or banging on whatever he can’t pick up. 

Lately I have grown very tired of its droning echo, and I do not think I am alone. This one, I think, has gone far enough. Give me more spider, more web, more patience, less noise. 

Lately, I think, give me no more of these old stories, only quiet tending: of the careful meal, the clean floor, fresh sheets, attentive care. 

It is possible I live at the beginning of the end of the age of an old story. As someone still alive inside it, I lack the perspective I would need to confirm or refute this suspicion with any presumption of accuracy.  

Finding the ability to make those quiet and non-storied, daily events happen is the only narrative I can find valuable right now. This is partially because I could use some help with these things and also because I have grown very tired of that other clamor. 

I am also weary of those who make, as a habit, a racket to entertain. These are different from those who make an entertaining noise for reasons they have not intended. I am weary of those who throw plastic affirmations when it is clear that all their expression can do is reproduce the old pain. 

The makers of these pseudo-joys, in an effort to to capitalize on the coin of the realm, regularly add to daily misery by their steadfast commitment to cellophane-wrapped optimisms. 

Meanwhile, so many dead. And also, so many able but unwilling bodies, who have made their non-decisions with brilliant sheens of glamour, who feel justified in their non-decisions to leave unwashed those dirty sheets, who unprepare the careful meal whether or not they will eat it, or to remember what hour of what day it is, now.

horse & rider

a tribute to the moment, and this place

Yes child, maybe one day,
in another world, the horse arrives,
its rider gallant and able. But now
is not that world

and this is not that time. Now he
spins, having lost both horse and will
to ride–– and besides, has never learned.

You are alone–– yet, look around.
Find the company of everyone before
you who has ever learned the same.

There is no more now
to do than there was before, only
less illusion. Carry on. Chin up.

Giddy-up. You are the horse
and the rider. Go on.

before here

what beyond there

And then in the hush, a shift
stops the pen, suddenly exhausted
by the weight of what preceded it.
There are not enough words
to make a wall between now
and what is lost. No sense
running for another stone
to prop up against the last
already threatening to give.
The only steps that matter now
are into a nonspace with no
road to lead you anywhere
and yet the only here
there is when you leave
that other one.

works of repair

before dawn

so often these are opposite to fixing
a way of saying, i will meet you
in the land of grief that we may
put hands in that soil together
& look around
& tend to what grows & also dies
especially the underground
invisibles
while others announce
their comings & goings
with great fanfare between
stints of weeping into the
pools of their own reflections

where meanwhile
we know life here & death
& stay with the work
to make it good.

count them

with bird

What after that wind flies? There goes one harpy. Now another. Repeat. They fall back later, to resume the docile pose of downy chicks in hand, two at a time.

After, one wonders. What this means if you consider the ratio of handheld bird to idea of those remaining in the bush? Look around then, sense a feather of presence. But now is one of those times when counting will not hold so maybe later but who knows. Was now always so hard to number–– or ever?

o bird
o feather
o breath
o time

hold me like the one about to fly
like found feather after bird gone
like opening notes of song almost
remembered.

out on a limb

in retreat

with weakness ever infinite,
surrender is always possible,
even likely.

better to the tree than the crowd,
better to the force of gravity than
the heights of a fool, professing––
anything.

out there, in the beyond, there
is a tree and she holds up the
sky

you can walk to her, extend a foot
to a branch and let her
hold you

suspended, then breathe and look.
how much better this offering
than another needless
sacrifice? you can

stay awhile. you may need to.
let the crowd and the fools
hold forth with the sole of
your foot facing sky

let your head remain grounded
beneath her shade. Extend
a hand, return.

Genesis of the Aftermath

driving beyond destinations

Greybeards cried over end times, but we had already heard a thousand stories of their decimated faith in old books. They remembered birds and beliefs, jungles of lapis blue wings and shelter in canopies of atmosphere, but we had drunk the cartoon blood of salesmen since birth. When it was time to leave, the stink of bodies stuck as we drove west. Power lines drooped a listless watch over dirt lots past signs for Jesus and ATV repairs, fencing miles of chain link. Homes peeled their skins, molting in time with the swing sets and plastic kiddie pools in yards with no children in sight. There were amphibian carcasses and state-prison boomtowns, scrappy sands and chaparral, freight trains snaking through the lowest-down place, through the hottest on record, the world’s tallest flagpole and the largest non-captive reptile ever witnessed, dead in the middle of the road. A mountain bled hearts of paint into the bombing range where plywood signs announced the coming of the last free place. It was cooperation month at the Home of the Jaguars and a Now Open sign at the Cattle Call rodeo dwarfed the elk across the street. Storage was three months free and senior centers waved like sunset pastures while aloe blades took arms against a sea of tumbleweed, rangers looting cash for anybody’s home. Exit here to eat, and we sped our eternal retreat from creatures in suspended animation––T-Rex, mustang, sloth––rusting in space to mock time. Have you seen these? It’s not a metaphor, someone made them to go with the land, each in life-sized mythic proportions. Meanwhile, trains processed a funeral formation from the gypsum plant. ATVs headed to the dunes. Tony from his diner stretched Come Inn cartoon hands, all caps. We would not stop, we swore in silence––not for bags of orange or avocado, not for the super lotto, the loose slots, or the triple live nudes, not for the antique malls, our lives. We dropped over the pass in a riptide of cars, unwilling to pause and unable to leave. Tracing taillights, we colored a sea we meant to reach a place where the ink of dreams spilled into the manifests. Our destiny these miles of surface reflections, unknowable deep. Now cruises come and go from the ports among barking seals touting two-for-one whale watching and we wonder, two whales for one price or two watches for one untold number of whales? Then the beachfront tent cities in the shadows near the cliffs. Behind the fish packing plant, men on bikes haul loads between camps, past children in fountains beneath gulls and Chinooks, banner ads for beer and Cheetahs and Crayola-bright kites, we count butterfly, plane, superheroes beneath the shock and awe of midday sun and every other star another death at high noon, invisible against this postcard blue. Our desert dust still clinging in each crevice, we find cover for the forms we still dare carry, here on these benches near the water somersaulting into memories we call wonder never death and then come questions. First among these is who will wash you now?

*

This piece first appeared in Issue Twelve of Fine Print Press, April 2023

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