New Moon
No one knew
what to make of the New Moon
when it first appeared,
and
maybe no one wanted to know what to make of it.
We already knew about new moons.
We saw the same new moon every month,
sometimes twice a month
depending on how the phases moved alongside our calendar.
No one wanted to believe it,
but willful disbelief
could only last for so long with
the new body,
night and day up in the sky,
fully formed and never phasing,
never waxing,
never waning,
as silent as the sun was loud,
as cold as the sun was hot.
When asked about the New Moon,
experts
were,
all of a sudden,
no longer experts,
and the words on expensive pieces of paper
meant little in the moment.
They tried to calm the panicked,
to still the bewildered,
tried to preach a gospel full of tropes and unknowns:
yes, the New Moon would bring many changes,
and those changes could upend everything
we knew;
but, the New Moon was neither good nor bad,
and its appearance neither fortunate nor unfortunate.
Some believed too little,
some believed too much.
The New Moon did upend everything
we knew about the world,
with there being two open eyes in the sky,
and a third that came about as regularly as it did before.
Many didn’t appreciate the change in the world,
and thinking if only the New Moon could be destroyed
or moved
or blocked somehow,
then maybe the Old Days
and the Old Ways
with only one eye fully open might come again.
Maybe blood on the ground would change the heavens.
It didn’t, of course, but
maybe
just the same.
While the first year of the New Moon
brought great hardship and great pain,
the New Moon reset the world,
balanced the world,
brought two eyes to the world.