Sunday, January 13, 2013

Questions

What about them?
 

I have a few.
 

Doesn’t everyone?
 

Yes. That’s part of the reason why I like them—how human they are, how curious.
 

There are other reasons to like questions?
 

Sure. I also like how they are infinite and how kids seem to understand that much better than adults—that there is never truly an answer. You can never satisfy “why?”  There is something sublime in that.
 

Anything else?
 

How they desire to have something to accompany them, even if it is just a simple yes or no. They invite relationships. They can open a person up.

 

You’re a romantic aren’t you?
 

That’s beside the point.
 

What if someone refuses or can’t answer?
 

Maybe that itself is an answer.
Maybe the question has already been answered.
Maybe the answer isn’t important, just the question.
 

Do you have an answer to everything?
 

No and I never will. Life is punctuated by one gigantic question mark.
 

You mean death? You are making life a sentence metaphor?
 

I guess so. I think it works, too. But I don’t think life is about pursuing just that particular question. It’s one you can spend a lifetime asking, though.
 

Do you believe in life after death?
 

That is beside point.
 

What is the point then?
 

I don’t know. Like I said, I have a few questions.

 

Next week I’ll be thinking about secrets.
 

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Answer a question, a hard one, with a poem.

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What Would It Be Like


For dinner a gourmet hamburger and fries
at the kitchen table facing the wall.

 
Knowing where all the remotes
to the television are, and my shoes


when the garbage is finally full
after weeks, maybe months.


Ties and v-neck sweaters and slacks
all without stains or wrinkles.


A new book every week.


Some different poem
about what it would be like
to have a family.

1 comment:

  1. I really like the concept of questions inviting relationships. I also like life being punctuated by one gigantic question mark, since essentially life is a collection of relationships, this makes a nice connection. Your ending is nice as well. This passage doesn't really answer any of the questions, it invites more.

    Your poem does a good job of conveying the theme of questions. It attempts to answer one but when it comes to the end it circles back around to another question, making your statement ring true that life is punctuated by a question mark.

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