Moonbase

My first night

alone

on the moon was a long one.

A cold one.

Maybe the longest and coldest night I’ve ever known.

Whenever I reported back to

homebase,

someone would ask if the dark had 

gotten to me yet

and I always replied, no.

The darkness wasn’t what

felt

most isolating.

It was the cold,

the loneliness. 

The difficulty in getting through

that first night,

the longest night,

and the long nights that came afterwards

lay in knowing the length of time

never changed. 

The only thing that changed was

how I counted

time,

how I measured

all the moments

while watching our pale blue dot

from my little station,

watching the monitors for signs

of invasion,

doing it all by myself for a year.

When I signed up for the job

I thought,

what’s a year to me?

A year is just a year.

It isn’t even that long.

I survived three years of plague.

I can survive a year alone on the moon.

I can survive a year of weight on my back,

a year waiting for what we are watching to signal

they are watching back.

I can survive a year of knowing my message

will arrive too late,

no matter how early I send it.

I can survive a year

of feigning hope,

of whispering sweet nothings—

all is well, no news, everything is in order—

so someone can tell someone else

everything

is under control.

I don’t think that first night alone

I really understood

what time on the moon would be like.

I didn’t understand 

how a moment 

can be a moment

can be a moment

can be a moment, 

but a moment isn’t always a moment

and sometimes a single moment 

has the same mass as a lifetime of moments.

Sitting alone that first night on the moon

with nothing

but silence and my own arms to keep me company,

I sat through one long moment.

Maybe I thought the plague years would have helped me with time,

with knowing things happen for as long as they happen,

and that nothing is forever.

Not even forever is forever.

But on the coldest and longest night of my life

I forgot what I knew,

and for the rest of the year I remembered what I forgot

and the weight of remembering the forgotten is

heavier

than anything else 

I can think of.

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New Moon

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Born of the stars