Fractal: a cascade of never-ending, self-similar, repeated
elements that change in scale but retain similar shape.
A
cascade
of
infinite
is why
I believe in
loops
and spirals,
subtle shifts, cycles.
My son, preschooler stunned
by
the science museum,
sticks his hand
into a glacier,
the chunk
a broken testimony,
the history
of
a world dissolving. Cold!
It’s cold! And
it’s melting. Look right here, he says.
Similarities
of self
astonish. I see them in
architecture,
geometry a welcome language,
shapes
a new alphabet for
prayer and song.
I study Peter Eisenman’s
House 11a
lapping up patterns, interlocking Ls,
squares and
replicated rectangles—
the syntax of
ideas. For Frank Gehry’s Guggenheim
in
Bilbao, syntax looks like
titanium scales rhyming across curves. Glass
and limestone
patterns, similarities of
visual texture,
are creations of weight, depth; order breaks
tension
where the lines turn. A cascade
of repeating elements grounds my belief in
humanity
as mystery. Signs appear: a sound,
song,
and syllable mean things.
Armadillo! Armadillo! sings my son,
the youngest,
using his Louis Armstrong
voice; grit gives way to twang and twang turns into hard-rock screams.
He’s an oracle
at four years old, an armor-clad mammal
his muse.
My oldest son speaks in code,
echolalia a symptom of a seizure-
besieged brain. When
he utters, No, and No, and No, and
No,
then I don’t know I don’t know I don’t know, I listen for
a divine voice revealed.
Cascades changing in scale, not shape, is why I
trust weight, depth, height-materials and thingness:
Saturn’s rings, the Pacific coastline, bolts of lightning,
a Romanesco
cauliflower, angelica flower-
heads, veins
of sycamore leaves, seashells, snowflakes, blood vessels, DNA.
A range and scope of fractals
inspire awe, a cascade of never-ending
wonder at both
connections and aberrations as
well
as places of perfect order and broken patterns. When
I consider what we
may be reduced-sized copies of, I grapple
with insight;
it hovers in physics and biology, the shapes of letters,
the magic of new languages,
the mystery of cells and synapses, the music
of my sons’ voices,
the geometries of buildings and trees.
Sometimes
I glimpse an answer, something like seeing starlight years after
the star dies, supernovas.
Four hours before my youngest son’s birth, I dreamed
my sister, dead
31 years, placed him in my arms: Take care of him, she said. He has
her eyes, ice-blue and illumined by
God.
Reprinted from The Poet & The Architect (Terrapin Books, 2021). Copyright © 2021 by Christine-Stewart Nunez. Used with permission of the author. All rights reserved.