We are always running out of time.

When we are born, it is as if

we know this already, with the first

reaching and clenching of tiny fists.

An attempt to take hold of it,

to still the moment long enough

that we may understand it. And

it is there, as we refuse to succumb

to slumber, as the day wanes, as

parents and child care workers insist

it is time to close our eyes and lose

awareness of the way it sweeps by.

It is there, in the excited waking

from each nap and each night,

a return to all the movement and life

that tick off the seconds of the day.

The anticipation of experience, of

an overload to the senses, and

a stirring of that mechanism which

soon will construct memories.

It is with us, this knowledge, even as

we anxiously await the moment when

baby teeth begin to loose themselves

becoming supplanted by the milestone,

a marker of time and illusory permanence,

yet even as we anticipate these summits,

we mourn the loss of childhood which

begins, even as we are still children.

Even as we look to what is to come

we are losing what is now, and the now

is what we anticipated just a breath ago;

so that the seconds tick across minutes

and the hand sweeps past hours, as

days succumb to memory and nights

intermingle with the dreams they host,

the sifting of this finite experience.

We navigate the passages and their

corresponding rites, ticking them off

one by one, imagining each to be

an equal measure, the way each foot

ascended along the mountain’s silhouette.

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