Lucky

Gabrielle Galchen
By Gabrielle Galchen
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Lucky

By Gabrielle Galchen

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In the context of mortality, the pandemic and the imminent impacts of climate change, it is beyond important to remember how objectively lucky we are to be alive. There is a certain priceless appreciation in simply existing and breathing comfortably within ourselves.

Lucky to be alive in the context of time:
you and me and our mortality.

Lucky to be alive to smell the seas of these clocks:
Ebb and flow, ebb and flow,
My voice’s cuckoo bird will never slumber.
I will never stop seeing kaleidoscopes of corals;
My chest is shielded with seashells,
Ears brimmed with humming sea-salts and doves’ lullabies.

Lucky to be alive, to be;
At night I dab my feet in a sand-scale 
That smells of cornflowers and roses 
Weaved into purple olive branches. 

To be alive is to exist is to mark:
I won’t float, 
I won’t simmer,
I won’t cease—

My span is made of clouds, I know,
But I dream of infinity enough to see 
My reflection in tree rings. 

Lucky to be, to breathe, to beat:
I am,
I am,
I am,

Lucky to be alive before the screech of
Ravens sermonizes wildfires, 
Lucky to be alive during pixelated spontaneities
And self-figmented sunrises;
Lucky to be alive after winds whispering of 
Past muddied selves dripped to new horizons. 

What we see is what we are,
A mold born of spiders or bees
Into creeping grey webs or honeyed gold. 

Process

I had a prompt that was “lucky to be alive,” and this is where it took me! I started thinking about this luck in the context of mortality, but then I also considered the impacts of the pandemic and climate change on public mental health. Though it is obviously easier said than done, as I wrote I wanted to spread the message that it’s crucial to appreciate the mere fact of our existence, as life is filled with chaos and spontaneities that we can never predict. I attempted to take an almost positive view of existentialism and uncertainty, and I felt that the overall joyful tone would fit a more lyrical, song-like poem (spoken-word).

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Gabrielle Galchen

Half Israeli and half American, Gabrielle Galchen will never quite fit in except for when she writes, when she belongs…

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