I got an email from Kickstarter a few days ago that spoke to the current moment:
“In times of crisis, some might feel selfish pursuing creative work. It might be hard to imagine why your art matters in the midst of a pandemic. But think of the book that shaped your childhood; the movie you watch whenever you feel sad. Creative work transports us. It recharges and renews us. And in order to experience it, someone needs to make it—to get that strange, unprecedented idea out into the world.” (No author cited)
But a few hours earlier, for the first time in a long damn time I started writing a poem, which I will find tomorrow and finish and post here. But in the meantime I wrote this for a prompt on one of my Facebook groups. It is dedicated to Musashi, who is now the Teaching Assistant for my now-online classes.
Love in the time of plague is this black cat
walking over my keyboard because he knows
attention is love, attention to what your loved one
attends to is love, and also when she doesn’t yell at you
for making all the M’s run across the screen
that reticence, the soft voice calling you
a goober, that most of all is also love.
And yes. That is my rollbook he’s sitting on.