There are names for what binds us: strong forces, weak forces. Look around, you can see them: the skin that forms in a half-empty cup, nails rusting into the places they join, joints dovetailed on their own weight. The way things stay so solidly wherever they’ve been set down — and gravity, scientists say, is weak.
And see how the flesh grows back across a wound, with a great vehemence, more strong than the simple, untested surface before. There’s a name for it on horses, when it comes back darker and raised: proud flesh,
as all flesh, is proud of its wounds, wears them as honors given out after battle, small triumphs pinned to the chest —
And when two people have loved each other see how it is like a scar between their bodies, stronger, darker, and proud; how the black cord makes of them a single fabric that nothing can tear or mend.
by Jane Hirshfield From Of Gravity and Angels
True recovery is a profoundly ethical journey, finding meaning and dignity through solidarity and restitution. Without that, there may be a cessation of drinking or substance use, but there is no real recovery.
— Sigrid Rausing
Simply Lit
Often toward evening, after another day, after another year of days, in the half dark on the way home I stop at the food store and waiting in line I begin to wonder about people—I wonder if they also wonder about how strange it is that we are here on the earth. And how in order to live we all must sleep. And how we have beds for this (unless we are without) and entire rooms where we go at the end of the day to collapse. And I think how even the most lively people are desolate when they are alone because they too must sleep and sooner or later die. We are always looking to acquire more food for more great meals. We have to have great meals. Isn’t it enough to be a person buying a carton of milk? A simple package of butter and a loaf of whole wheat bread? Isn’t it enough to stand here while the sweet middle-aged cashier rings up the purchases? I look outside, but I can’t see much out there because now it is dark except for a single vermilion neon sign floating above the gas station like a miniature temple simply lit against the night.
Malena Morling, from Astoria
If you’re playing poker and you don’t know who the patsy is, you’re the patsy.
— Warren Buffet
Triad
These be Three silent things: The falling snow. . the hour Before the dawn. . the mouth of one Just dead.