# What a Mostly-Blind Eye Says **by Caryn Mirriam-Goldberg** Close the lids of your words and listen. The dirt, soft and loamy, is where the rising world makes its home. I may be mostly blind, but who isn’t? Still, I can see the sounds of birds only the power lines adore. I can inhale a swath of light swimming in sun the so-called seeing eye can’t imagine. Light hums like the smooth sides of a large cave, marrying the particulars we usually divide: irritated cat instead of unmade bed, doorknob instead of golden globe mirroring the sky. Why do I keep saying, “mostly blind,” as if someone, surely not me, chuffed all the shutters down at once to fixate on where the wall meets the floor with a pipsqueak of a crack? Nothing taken or lost ever leaves us completely. Bodies were made to compensate, to sing in their rusty voices of what’s coming into view, especially in the dark. All God’s children love the sky.