The degrees of unknowing we’re born with are
strangely
quite different between and among us: they’ve swung
us,
in fact, to believe we’re inarguably this or
that. They might
not be wrong. Take you, who in baby fat probably
knew from
the womb that the first time you’d glance at the
room they
would put you to crawl in you’d long for and relish
its space:
instantly grasp its equations as if you’d
created them –
understood with precision so fine, so aligned
with your vision
not only of where Up and Down led, but how they
would rise
in their likely trajectories out into
limitlessness: calculating
just where they would lead in the cosmos you
knew from
a glance at the sky was all infinite fact. Your
simple grace
with the spatial gave climbing a chair or a
sofa or bed such
performative ease – you precocious adept apparatus!
Well, darling you had us – while babbling rapidly,
happily on
to your confidant Gravity; less a made-up bestie
than a favorite
aunt. And then out of nowhere came those two unthinkable
words – wailed in anguish, intoned like a dirge:
“I can’t.”
You’d heard a bird make noise. Gravity, with
whom as usual
you sat, beamed with pleasure like a petted
cat. She effused:
“What fluidity! The bell, the jewel in that
note!” (To you it was
monotonously meaningless and tediously rote.) “What
poise!”
“How it annoys!” your tone was flat. “Noise, my
ass,” spat
back the suddenly irascible Aunt Gravitas. “That’s
music.”
What was it for? Who in command of their senses
would
choose it? Lose it, refuse it. Others heard a melody.
That
burned. You never learned the thrill, and never
will, they
said this thing would bring. You didn’t sing. You
wouldn’t.
Nor imitate a pitch. You couldn’t. You’d never
dance.
You’d always plod. But you
could measure space like God.
.
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