Morning has broken like the first morning.
I stood at the French doors and watched the birds swarm in from the forest to the early morning buffet. Seeing those jewels of the animal kingdom feasting there made my heart glad. I smiled—it was reward enough for getting up early.
Oh, no!, Amy said from somewhere inside my head. Don't go whining about me to her again. The problem is your anxiety issue. It has nothing to do with me.
"Amy, you literally decide when I'm going to be anxious."
Just doing my job, she said. Look it up if you don’t believe me; I’m not called the seat of emotions for nothing. Those memories of yours are your legacy. You earned them by making all those mistakes. And besides, you take yourself too seriously. Talk to your therapist about that. Great Caesar’s ghost, Genome! It’s only life; it’s not supposed to be serious.
Praise for them springing fresh from the World.
“You’re nuts!" I said aloud, causing the birds to scatter from the feeder. "It’s my life we’re talking about—and life is serious.”
I thought of asking why she'd quoted Perry White, Clark Kent’s boss in the original Superman comics, but I managed to stay on topic and said instead.
“You’re probably thinking of Billy Joel, when he sang, ‘We’re only human; we’re supposed to make mistakes.’ Nothing is more serious than life, Amy.”
Well, you're right about being human, she said. We can agree on that 'cause all you do is make mistakes.
"That's not true, and you should be so snarky this early in the morning."
Quiet! I've got the floor. Shakespeare said that life's a circus, and I know you can't argue with anything your precious Bard wrote.
Shakespeare never said that life is a circus. What he said was..."
Yeah, yeah, whatever. He said that life's a circus. Don’t get your knickers in a wad. Sit back and enjoy it.
Like the first dewfall, on the first grass.
I don’t make silly mistakes like that, she said. George Carlin wore his hair in a ponytail and talked about the hippy-dippy weather. Shakespeare is the schoolteacher from a country village who got above himself and stole ducks from the city park.
"We've had this conversation before," Amy. "The story, and I'm not sure it's been confirmed, is that he poached deer in the Royal Park." She rolled her eyes when I said it, or she seemed to, at least. I only see her in my imagination.
Genome, what the hell does poached mean? It sounds deranged. I'm sure rural schoolteachers don’t do that.
"They poach deer if they teach school in rural Tennessee," I said.
Silence returned, giving me the hope that I'd stymied her.
Silence had the floor once more, and this time, I was the stymied one.“I hated it when I was growing up there—couldn’t wait to get away,” I mused.
Praise for the sweetness of the wet garden.
Well, we got away, and if you ask me, that wasn’t one of your mistakes.
You know what they say: it’s better to be from there and have the memories than to still be there.
"We've done alright, Amy."
Speaking of being from there,” she continued, do you realize what it took to bring you where you are today, standing here enjoying those birds? Do you have any idea why it makes you happy to watch them enjoying the breakfast you prepared?
She didn't wait for an answer. She rarely does.
I’ll tell you, she said. Ancestors, that’s what. Ancestors who struggled to live long enough to reproduce. And by ancestors, I mean your parents, grandparents, and everyone else all the way back to the rodents, the fishes, and the insects. That’s what it took, Genome—and your joy in watching those birds is an ancestral memory of all that.
When I didn't immediately respond, she said, You bolt!
We were both quiet. Silence was becoming a familiar part of the morning.
"Dolt," I said, coming out of my reverie.
Well, you’re finally owning it. That’s progress, I guess.
Mine is the sunlight, mine is the morning.
It was turning out to be a big day for silences; we enjoyed another extended one.
“I’m glad you were with me, Amy. It hasn’t always been pleasant, but somehow you and I got to where we want to be. And just to be clear, George Carlin wore his hair in a ponytail, that much is true, but he didn’t talk about hippy-dippy weather; he was the Hippy Dippy Weatherman.”
Praise with elation, praise every morning. God's recreation of the new day.
Life is a circus, Genome, she said, sweetly this time, don't take it seriously."
I didn't say anything, I only nodded, and I imagined the little brat standing on the bridge of GMS Coastal Voyager, looking through the viewports of my eyes, and smiling back at me.







