Katy the Astronaut
The idea that I could go up
into space
and not be alone was a foreign concept to me.
When I signed the paperwork,
signed my life away,
i assumed it was a solo mission,
just me and the machines,
just me and my thoughts
going up and never coming back.
Exactly why I felt and thought way,
I couldn’t tell you,
but I learned later on when I got to the training centre
that I wouldn’t be alone.
I saw her and I knew
maybe we wouldn’t be okay going up there into the great unknown,
but I knew we would be okay facing the great unknown.
Katy told me she never planned on being an astronaut.
It wasn’t something I’d planned either.
But, we were both smart
enough
to understand what they wanted from us.
Sometimes I wonder if what the space programs
wanted
wasn’t information about space
or information about the great beyond,
the Undiscovered Country,
but to see what all that will do
to someone’s mind.
What will happen to someone’s heart up there for who knows how long?
Katy held it together better than I did.
For me,
it didn’t take long
for the madness to set in.
I lost track of time
early on;
morning is midnight is three o’clock is nine o’clock
and on and on.
No winter.
No summer.
No young or old.
There were only two of us.
Maybe I was winter and she was summer.
Maybe I was death and she was life.
Could one of us exist without the other?
If she became my mirror, what would happen when one of us died?
I had a hard time framing the world
almost as soon as we entered the world beyond.
I used to know Sun and Moon,
but the sun is just another star
and the moon is just another body.
What else is shaken loose?
Katy asked me about all of this once.
What I thought and how I felt
and I told her I felt like gravity didn’t exist anymore
and she told me that I was right and I was wrong.
All the grounding things
I knew
still existed,
still had value,
still had meaning,
but they were metaphors
and allegories now
and I needed
to work
to remember
how they still meant something.
In a life without day or night,
without winter or summer,
we make those things in our hearts.
Of course,
one constant we didn’t leave behind:
the reality of death couldn’t be avoided.
When I ejected Katy’s body into space,
I watched god enter into the void.
The one who warmed my cold heart,
who allowed me to hold onto some sense of myself,
the one who breathed nothing but light into my soul,
when she left so, too, did all those things.
Now I am truly lost.