I wish we could hear them just once,
instead of over and over. 
One day, tired, I sat down on the couch 
just to listen to the ringing in my ears. 
My eyes are so deep-set in my head 
it makes it hard to see 
past the memory of lost glamour, 
being born too late, living in the shadow 
of a beautiful downtown turned into 
a ghost town, a hollowed hulk, 
and how that itself now turns into 
a memory of treasures, 
how when something taken for granted 
is suddenly over, the pause when you take stock 
and realize you’ll never have as much, 
that change is always a lessening, 
the wall effect, you can’t see what’s next 
even though it’s supposedly obvious. 
I don’t know what to say about that, 
I mean, I’m just barely here.
Copyright © 2020 by James Cihlar. Originally published in Poem-a-Day on November 3, 2020, by the Academy of American Poets.