By Brendan Walsh
if god is cruel, which they might be,
or god is merely the neutral arc
of the universe that bends towards
apathy, then the specific agony
of folding my laundry, piles & piles
of endless fabrics, makes cosmic
sense. but today, i fold your laundry,
left behind in the dryer on your way
out the door—let me not mention
the week we’ve had, both cars killed
in catastrophic flooding, two hours
trudging the waist-deep waters—,
the black pants which two nights ago
were soaked to the pockets with sewer
runoff, your pink pajamas which you wore
after our shower, before we collapsed
in the bed, our minds hurtling toward
the expensive, unknown future, little
socks which hug your little feet, silken
underwear, that cool afroed woman
graphic tee, her hair a bouquet of flowers;
i fold all of it. not once do i consider
the struggle, the devastation we own,
only that i love the things you wear.
Brendan Walsh has lived and taught in Laos, South Korea, and South Florida. He is the author of six poetry collections, including concussion fragment, winner of the 2022 Florida Book Award. He’s the cohost of Fat Guy, Jacked Guy, a podcast with Stef Rubino. He’s online at brendanwalshpoetry.com.