The Mind Is Its Own Place
The Mind Is Its Own Place Ann Townsend Mated and unmated, starlings swarm the willow with their devotions until the tree roils and sways, wing-beats sounding the torrent through which they swim. Dopamine, paroxetine, an injection of adrenaline into the bloodstream: these deliver the dissident fuel I crave for the mind's pleasure, and for its pain. Call it one song indispensable to trouble the branching arteries. The willow divinates toward water, switching in the breeze; it grazes the edge but cannot rest there. My fingertips pressed against my temples: ten points of sensation, a vaulted cage where starlings congregate to rustle their chaos, their alphabet blown to bits in the wind's rush. Yes, you heard me. Like an aviary, Plato said, the mind is full of birds. |