Robinson Crusoe
I still dream about other people
even though I have been all alone up here
and have been for quite some time.
Last night I dreamt
about someone playing with fire
and burning themselves up.
I saw the blistered skin on their shoulder blades
looking like wings were going to burst through
and I thought it was a funny play on Icarus.
I dreamt someone had removed all the stairs from a house
and I thought about what that would have meant for Sisyphus.
I dreamt, too, about going to work in a kitchen
and my colleagues suggesting my footwear might not have been
the safest thing to wear,
and I wondered if safety mattered,
especially my safety.
And when I woke up,
I was confused for a few seconds
as I looked out the window of my shuttle
and stared into endless space,
into void that,
everyone says,
is only getting bigger.
I’ve been alone for ten years up here.
I haven’t seen another person in the flesh
in so long
I’m surprised I can even imagine what someone else looks like,
let alone still have the capacity to care.
Life alone so far away for so long
isn’t something I wish on anyone.
I wonder what Robinson Crusoe did.
I wonder how he survived.
I read once that the real man, the real Robinson Crusoe,
didn’t wear shoes for so long that his feet swelled
when he tried to wear shoes.
Maybe that will happen with me if I ever see anyone again,
but I imagine it will be my heart or my mind that swells
and I doubt it will be good for me.