Internal Reasons and the Obscurity of Blame
I'm often sorry about wanting to catch you when you're down
           but other days I fake it. My work
 requires some level of regret I can't muster consistently.
 It rains. I open my heart enough to let a moth fly in,
           then trap it. I'm sorry to say that's how poems are made. One eye
 on each wing, this whole-body blinking.
 All of this makes sense as long as you keep yourself from thinking about it.
           Not an elephant. Not an oil crisis.
 Until yesterday, several vials of smallpox remained
           unaccounted for, resting benevolent in a cardboard box
 in an unused storage area of a research center in Bethesda.
           Concerning the accounted-for vials, those too
 have yet to be destroyed by the United States
           or Russia.
 It's easy to dream myself in a cardboard box. I'm
           very good at holding my breath.
 But how can you not harbor doubts? Economist
          Morris Adelman died last month, his famous line—We will never run out
 of oil. Or smallpox, as it happens.
 As it happens, I go into the sunroom to water the jade, the child
           of my grandmother's plant which was cut
 from her nurse's plant which was cut from her
           ex-husband's plant. I'm getting to the part where
 I run out of things to say about extinction. Cut a branch
           and bury it. Sometimes
 I'm sorry these plants take such little care, such
           little work required of me.
Copyright Credit: Katie Willingham, "Internal Reasons and the Obscurity of Blame" from Unlikely Designs.  Copyright © 2017 by Katie Willingham.  Reprinted by permission of The University of Chicago Press.
Source: Unlikely Designs (The University of Chicago Press, 2017)


