A Robot Calls Me on the Day We Take the 10,000th Syrian Refugee into America

Hello, you croon, you’ve been selected.
Hi, I say, but Jane (I named you)
 
you just murmur on like some dumb
heart or other mindless organ
 
asking if I have a business.
You are so intrusive but familiar,
 
and so I must love you,
monotoned and strange
 
in your inflection, dialing me
when I wake up from Prosper,
 
TX, and Marathon, FL,
and once from my home state,
 
the Land of 10,000 Lakes.
I can’t seem to get my name
 
on the Do Not Call List—
I’ve tried to tell you, no,
 
I do not have a business,
and when you phone me
 
I just think of all the people
waiting for a good news ring—
 
for their names to bubble up
on the right list—Jane,
 
I don’t know what to name it
but let’s call it sadness,
 
let’s call it hoping-you’ll-
be-seen—could we go
 
on a spree of noticing
and being noticed, like it is
 
our business, Jane? Yes, I know
this need is unattractive,
 
that need is unattractive,
that we’re taught to turn
 
our backs to it, roll our windows
up and look away from it, steel
 
the adipose reserves
where we store empathy
 
for humans whom we locate far
from us on the spectrum—
 
as if it existed, the spectrum—
as if there is any room
 
between yes and no—yes,
those territories touch
 
and share a border, and there is
no room for a body
 
to straddle the line—
there is room for all 10,000 lakes,
 
and so why not the refugees?
What a crude word for person,
 
what a cruel way to count
lives, in digits—Jane, you must
 
know a thing about vastness—
look, how the lake is so wide
 
that you cannot see across—
please, tell them about the lake,
 
Jane, tell them how you cannot see
the far shore from here—tell them
 
there is space, Jane, tell them
there is room to bring their homes.
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