Hannah Butcher-Stell
These Days
Ten Days of Awe and I am lying
on the carpet, looking out
the window, at a world
I do not know yet.
How many blessings have slipped
through my skirt and scuttled
to the floor, our marriage
just a few weeks old, our chuppah
flowers preserved.
I sleep, and this is standard.
I eat, and this is standard.
I pray, and this is standard—but rare
that I feel Presence like this, like I’m
standing on the edge of a needle
about to thread.
Soon it is the very eve
of Yom Kippur and my new husband
says he does not feel he deserves
to ask G-d for what he wants.
How many blessings pass
without us noticing, I say, but not to him.
They wear many cloaks
and different faces; they know our names.
We eat, and this is standard.
We pray, and this is standard—but rare
that we just lie down,
hold our breath like we’ve done these days.
Watch the needle shake
before going in.