Easy light storms in through the window, soft 
            edges of the world, smudged by mist, a squirrel’s  
            nest rigged high in the maple. I’ve got a bone  
to pick with whomever is in charge. All year,  
I’ve said, You know what’s funny? and then, 
            Nothing, nothing is funny. Which makes me laugh 
            in an oblivion-is-coming sort of way. A friend 
writes the word lover in a note and I am strangely 
excited for the word lover to come back. Come back 
            lover, come back to the five and dime. I could  
            squeal with the idea of blissful release, oh lover, 
what a word, what a world, this gray waiting. In me, 
a need to nestle deep into the safe-keeping of sky. 
            I am too used to nostalgia now, a sweet escape 
            of age. Centuries of pleasure before us and after 
us, still right now, a softness like the worn fabric of a nightshirt 
and what I do not say is, I trust the world to come back. 
            Return like a word, long forgotten and maligned  
            for all its gross tenderness, a joke told in a sun beam, 
the world walking in, ready to be ravaged, open for business.
Copyright © 2021 by Ada Limón. Originally published in Poem-a-Day on October 4, 2021, by the Academy of American Poets.