Church of the Falling Moon
I used to look up at a sky I considered
empty of the things I didn’t know about.
I knew the moon
and, broadly,
I knew the stars.
I could show you
Mars and Venus,
maybe others, too,
if I knew to look for them.
But,
it was always
Down Here
and
Up There
and Up There
was grand and unchanging,
as constant as constant could be.
I thought Down Here was important.
The New Moon changed everything,
especially when we all learned it was two
hundred miles wide.
Nothing else mattered.
Destiny made known its name,
made known that everything
would be put to rest.
Every score would be settled,
every debt would be cleared,
every imbalance balanced.
Everything would be quiet
and everything would be perfect.
I worried about all of this,
about Our Lady of the Two Hundred Miles
growing larger by the day
until she birthed through the atmosphere,
her great fire
smashing to the core of our existence,
and turning our Great Mother to dust.
The Great Fear
told me
everything would always be for naught,
that nothing would survive Our Lady.
The people who didn’t want to believe were being
forced to believe.
The truth was the truth.
Our Lady was real.
But, if Our Lady was real,
so was the Great Mother
and while She might be blasted into a trillion pieces
we would be a part of those trillion pieces.
Now, when I look up at the sky, I know it isn’t empty
even if I don’t know what’s up there.