It is easy to wonder what the shape of it should be--it, the thing you offer up to the world.
To make it something that is not you and yet where you, and others, can belong.
What question, for instance, best invites these others into your private language?
Since to be there together means finding what Stevens calls, “the obscurity of an order.”
Even as the fight against obscurity and the news of the day demands you look through the lens of reality too.
My eclectic form--statement, place, query, school, today, I, statement again--means only to find such a shape, to play at a way of knowing . . . of being . . .
. . . Where the up and down of everything, or almost everything, can get down to it.