To a Crying Baby (for Ryan)
by Thomas Rions-Maehren
I get it. You
used to simply not exist, and now
you do. That’s a lot to cope with. Pile on
the undefined stomach pains, chafing diapers,
icy boredom, and the
the disorienting vastness of the world around you; crying
is probably the only thing that
makes sense. Heck,
it’s been decades, and the thought
of the absurdity and the superfluousness of my own
existence, this grey sweater I’m sown into
that’s just a bit too warm and vaguely itchy, still
brings tears to my eyes
sometimes. The emptiness here
has so much pizzazz – flashing neon lights, raucous rattles,
googoo gaga nonsense, dizzying mobiles of disingenuous
smiling faces looking down on you,
sweet, sweet binkies that are fun to suck
but relinquish nothing – and society fills
you with shiny sparkling nothingness
until, hollow, you burst into a blustery
confetti of dust and nostalgia. What I mean
is that none of this matters, but even
as a newborn, you’re hardwired
to grope around for meaning,
and you’ll spend a hundred years probing
through a goopy, mushy, baby food reality,
fumbling and feeling and reaching for
and failing to find something that doesn’t even exist
like the milk your tiny mouth contorts to suck
in your dreams.
I suppose it’s all my fault
for dragging you into this in the first place.
I’m sorry.
I don’t have any answers,
but I’ll be here if you want to order a pizza and talk about it.