Wave Function
Monastery Beach, Carmel, California
Beach an archipelago of kelp after storms
for days
then smooth and clear
apart from one small thing
I almost miss:
a rock fish,
twenty feet from the water alive –
barely breathing. The faint
twitch, wide expanse of sand,
sea indifferent
desolate geometry
that collapses
everything
to a single point –
save that life.
Twice I lay it at the water’s edge,
run backwards to avoid getting wet.
But the tide leaves
and it’s still there.
The third time
a rush of life
and it twists
around my knees
and darts away.
That life, a tiny crease in the universe,
now tangled with mine –
subatomic knot in spacetime –
a charged particle of prayer.
Carrying my sodden shoes,
disturbing puddles,
I walk home barefoot
like the Carmelite nuns nearby,
picking through stones
on the road.
Maria Surricchio is originally from the UK and now lives near Boulder, Colorado. A life-long lover of poetry, she turned to writing in 2020 after a long marketing career. Her work has been published, and is forthcoming, in the I-70 Review, Delta Poetry Review, Lily Poetry Review and The Dillydoun Review. She has a BA in Modern Languages from Cambridge University and is an MFA candidate at Pacific University.