One
year ago yesterday the World Health
Organization (WHO) declared the Coronavirus pandemic and suddenly, as
if a light switch had been flicked
everything changed. We shut down and retreated to our homes,
got used to mantras about masks, social distancing, and washing
our hands for as long as it takes to sing
Happy
Birthday.
I
was getting ready for an event that
I had been working on for months—Poets in
Resistance II scheduled for Friday, March 13 at the Tree of Life Unitarian Universalist Congregation in McHenry, Illinois. A year ago today, I had to abruptly cancel the event and scramble to
contact all of the poets and volunteers and let the public know. Still, I expected we could reschedule in a couple of month or so.
My
71 birthday was coming up on St. Patrick’s Day and our whole extended clan was expected to gather to celebrate that and other March natal
anniversaries the next weekend. It
will be this Easter, at best, when
most of us have had our shots that
we will be able to gather again and dote
on the babies—great granddaughter Sienna
and granddaughter Matilda born 9
months ago in the midst of the plague.
As
Uncle Joe Biden was addressing the nation and I was waiting to begin yet another Zoom meeting, my mind wandered.
When I finally got to sleep
last night I had a dream which woke me and I scrambled to write it down before it evaporated like so many night
visions.
One Year Later
The Anniversary of the Corona Virus Pandemic
March 11, 2021
I dreamed that we were salamanders
in the window well
after a long drought
and a horrid winter.
We buried ourselves
in the mud and the
mire
below that thick
layer
of leaves blown down
from the catalpa.
We are waiting for spring rains
to fill the well
and some early balmy
days
to warm the mud.
Then one fine day
the children down the
street
will come, bend over,
brush the leaves
aside
and squeal with
delight.
They will run home for a sand pail
or a mother’s pot
to come and scoop us
up
in all of our
wriggling,
sliming mottled green
and black.
And then will run home
to show us off.
—Patrick Murfin
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