(A prophetess in Greek mythology cursed by Apollo to speak the truth but to never be believed.) Words bombard the world in rapid fire every second. Another book about wizards, another poem about birds, tweets about Trump, status updates about dinner and cats and vacations, websites for anything you can think to Google. Godzilla porn. Why the Kardashians are famous. What a chair would look like if knees bent backwards. The things to read outnumber the readers. Still, writers write. In their lonely caves, by monitor light, they fill terabytes of memory with the past and the future. They churn together experience and understanding until hardened into a vision worth writing down. And then they hope that someone is paying attention. But no one is, at least not at first. Journalists wrote about the Taliban before 9/11. Before Y2K, tech writers predicted a computer in our pockets more powerful than Apollo 11. A scientist published in 2019 about a coming worldwide pandemic. No one listens until prophecies turn to floods. Still, writers write. They spew forth reams of poetry and prose and essays and journal entries and investigative reports and sometimes just half-thoughts or a particularly interesting turn of phrase on a random Post-it note barely clinging to a wall for years until used or discarded, but playing on the mind of the writer in ways both certain and inscrutable. Half-thoughts that may never be read by another, but recorded anyway for naught but potential. Words newly discovered or characters formed in journals like pop-up books, story lines and first-time rhymes scratched on a pad, then shaped in a computer, then offered to a first reader like an initial visit to a new therapist and waiting to hear whether to expand or contract, whether to improve or whether to shake the etch-a-sketch until the lines are faint then wisps then gone, but if improved, then posted for the world to see even if no one listens. Because the Post-It note held an idea that was true. Because the work holds the prediction of a world made by our own hands. Because when the flood comes, and floods always come, words from dry land will be needed. © 2020 Deb Moore, All Rights Reserved
