Return home
It’s hard to imagine
life
on the station ever coming
to an end,
that a day will come when I
can return to Earth and be around other people.
I stopped counting the days I’ve spent up here
because
day and
night
don’t really exist. Maybe
they never
existed on Earth either, and
it’s always been just a way to
try and stay together.
The sunshine is always a good reason to be with someone.
The shadows are always a good reason to be with someone.
Up here,
the sunshine and shadows exist,
but they aren’t the same thing as down there.
When you can lower the sunshield and
stare at the sun for hours and hours, sleep under its rays,
it isn’t really the same as knowing when
it will rise and
when it will set.
Just the same, every waking moment
can be spent in shadows up here.
I wonder what it will be like
when I finally land,
soil under my feet,
real moisture in the air,
with real sunlight touching my skin,
real moonlight touching my skin.
What will the phases of the moon feel like?
Will the glitter of the stars still mystify me?
I hope so.
I hope the return is just as exciting as the exit was.
I hope finding a way to reconnect after so long in space
is as refreshing as I found disconnecting to be.
I hope there is less pain than there was before,
less fear,
less anxiety,
less depression,
and I hope there is less
desire to disconnect
and flee to the void
under some pretence
of being a watcher in the sky.
I know my time up here,
floating all by my lonesome
will come to an end
and it is hard to imagine the return.