In the span of my decades, I’ve lived through the ripening of our sphere as if a round fruit which now, hour by hour, is rotting. Planet Earth reduced to a melon.
Cut open the orb at its peak and you release the sun and the
moon, the music of the spheres. Can it be, what seemed like progression was, in
fact, cyclic? The straight line, actually bent. The Allies and Axis of 1941,
flipped five years later and now the enemy is ourselves. The crystal ball bounces and rolls.
Melons fiercely hold their mystery. I’ve seen buyers at the market knocking on
their skin and listening as if they could overhear a conversation among the
pits. I’ve grown accustomed to the unknowing. It reminds me of something close at hand.
I’ve been watching it for the past six days. I pick it up
and feel for? For what, I don’t know. This morning, I spoke to it. Are you ripe
and ready? I think I heard a high pitch beep but that may have been a garbage
truck backing up. What the hell, I bought it last Thursday. If I wait another
day I may have missed the propitious moment. Everything in its time.
There are no signifiers. No bag of waters breaking. No
contractions at short intervals. Every birth is Cesarean. So now I am making my
incision straight down the mid-sagittal line to eventually create perfect
quadrants….as if the judge from Uzbekistan is scrutinizing my grip for Olympian
gold.
One nation indivisible, we pledged and we were when I
spoke those words during WW II. Today we are a divisible zig-zag, as is this
fractious globe, subject to a thousand cuts.
I would grant this honeydew an 8.7. I think it was a day
away from sublimity. I wonder if melons rate us on a scale ranging from
feckless to reckless. He who hesitates gets mush. He who rushes gets a sort of
potato.
With a little bit of luck, our lifespan peaks when the world
is ripening. By that schedule I should have checked out ten years ago or maybe hang
around for another ten.
In honeydew talk I would hope for the pulpy flesh, lunar-luscious, in its
prime as it reaches its upward slope when it sings, no zings, as if summoning
Orpheus with his lute in the lost language of melon.