Stephen Hawking,
having passed away
a full fifty one years
post predicted demise,
has left us trails,
breadcrumbs.
Not random,
because nothing is
haphazard as it seems.
Rather they are beaded,
strung together
on some
holographic ribbon
run through holes
patterned in multiverses
of black velvet,
and I’m already poeming
a proposal
that each patient,
upon a presumed life
shortening diagnosis,
be presented with
Stephen’s curriculum vitae
and
for good measure,
a collection of verse,
(the non-rhyming kind),
to further impeach
the arrogance
that moves mere mortals
to issue proclamations
of allotted time,
as if anyone could ensconce
one star from its constellation,
give it nothing to reflect
back or upon,
and foretell its singular light
in years.
Stephen, leaving breadcrumbs,
round clues to square
the life he left behind—
two wives, three children,
a dozen maps with two sided arrows
pointing to where
we came from, where
we might go,
a dummies guide to
how to flourish
despite, or with, or even because of,
also left a hundred doors
open to the curious among us,
which should mean everyone,
and he gave language
to the way an atheist sparks
a deeper appreciation of God.
It’s all in how you label it;
accident, plan,
gift, curse
it’s all up for grabs in a universe
where everything is sacred
or nothing is.
Melinda Coppola
What is the definition of a poet? I think we are interpreters of everyday sights and sounds and interactions, enabling more people to experience the sheer miracles that surround us and live within us. Stephen Hawking grasped things most could never comprehend, yet his named theories and observations captivated millions. He was a brilliant physicist, yet also a poet in his own way.
I am so amazed and delighted by you. I feel as one would feel, maybe, on witnessing the birth of a star system. As l experience, from wherever l am, let’s say in the ether, your LIVING experiences.
LOVE LIGHT BLESSINGS
Alexa