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      January 7, 2011How You KnowJoe Mills

      How do you know if it’s love? she asks,
      and I think if you have to ask, it’s not,
      but I know this won’t help. I want to say
      you’re too young to worry about it,
      as if she has questions about Medicare
      or social security, but this won’t help either.
      “You’ll just know” is a lie, and one truth,
      “when you still want to be with them
      the next morning” would involve too
      many follow-up questions. The difficulty
      with love, I want to say, is sometimes
      you only know afterwards that it’s arrived
      or left. Love is the elephant and we
      are the blind mice unable to understand
      the whole. I want to say love is this
      desire to help even when I know I can’t,
      just as I couldn’t explain electricity, stars,
      the color of the sky, baldness, tornadoes,
      fingernails, coconuts, or the other things
      she has asked about over the years, all
      those phenomena whose daily existence
      seems miraculous. Instead I shake my head.
      I don’t even know how to match my socks.
      Go ask your mother. 
      She laughs and says,
      I did. Mom told me to come and ask you.

      from #33 - Summer 2010