You may think it inconsequential that an empty
tube of toothpaste is not, if pressed, empty,
but has more to give of itself. You may prefer
odes to lofty ideas, or nature, or love. You may
have studied Shakespeare, Bayesian probability,
Goethe and Shelley, Darwin and Einstein.
Perhaps your idea of perfect relaxation is sipping
tea on a rainy day as film noir plays on the TV
and the pitter-patter of rain tickles your eardrums.
Perhaps, at this moment, you feel too tired, too
cynical, too important, too old or too young
to marvel at such banalities. I have been in
your place and more. Yet this morning the gravity
of this war-torn epoch hit me square in the throat;
and would you believe, my friend, that what saved
me was that very last dollop of toothpaste—rinsing
away the residue of yesterday’s ghastly failures? 
 

Image credit:Matthew on Flickr

Andy Posner grew up in Los Angeles and earned an MA in Environmental Studies at Brown. While there, he founded Capital Good Fund, a nonprofit that provides financial services to low-income families. When not working, he enjoys reading, writing, watching documentaries, and ranting about the state of the world. He has had his poetry published in several journals, including Burningword Literary Journal (which nominated his poem ‘The Machinery of the State’ for the Pushcart Poetry Prize), Noble/Gas Quarterly, and The Esthetic Apostle.