was no consolation to the woman 
whose husband was strung out on opioids. 
Gone to a better place: useless and suspect intel 
for the couple at their daughter’s funeral 
though there are better places to be 
than a freezing church in February, standing 
before a casket with a princess motif.  
Some moments can’t be eased 
and it’s no good offering clichés like stale 
meat to a tiger with a taste for human suffering. 
When I hear the word miracle I want to throw up 
on a platter of deviled eggs. Everything happens
for a reason: more good tidings someone will try 
to trepan your skull to insert. When fire 
inhales your house, you don’t care what the haiku says 
about seeing the rising moon. You want 
an avalanche to bury you. You want to lie down 
under a slab of snow, dumb as a jarred 
sideshow embryo. What a circus. 
The tents dismantled, the train moving on, 
always moving, starting slow and gaining speed, 
taking you where you never wanted to go. 
Copyright © 2024 by Kim Addonizio. Originally published in Poem-a-Day on March 12, 2024, by the Academy of American Poets.
