Laws of Motion by Meghana Mysore

amanda mabel girl field hair
Photo courtesy of Amanda Mabel

I. Every object in a state of uniform motion tends to remain in that state of motion unless an external force is applied to it.

Annabelle constructed her dreams in a globe,
glass surrounding the dream-world like a cell’s membrane.
What do you make of this world?
Do you think it’s truly impermeable? Do you think anything
is truly impermeable?

Annabelle constructed her dreams deliberately, precisely
following the rules of uniformity with each daily addition.
Inside the globular world were fairies, and ambitions, and
the perfectly quantified fruits of her mind. In this dream world,
nothing was left to interpretation.

Annabelle constructed her dreams with her own hands
for the fear that someone else’s would corrupt them.
Addition by addition, part by part, she assembled the pieces,
the starry ambitions, the broken thoughts, the half-hearted wishes.
Soon, she had something to put on display.

Annabelle constructed her dreams with the purpose of putting
them on display. Contained in the globe, they would never break;
she was sure of it. Once her hands had finished constructing,
she exposed the globular dream-world to the human world.
Only her hands, grasping from the outside,

could make the fragile world
and only her hands
could break the fragile world

Shattered, broken, permeable–
permeable–this
world of dreams.

II. The relationship between an object’s mass m, its acceleration a, and the applied force is F= ma. Acceleration and force are vectors; in this law the direction of the force vector is the same as the direction of the acceleration vector.

F=ma
How else would you put it?
The force vector and acceleration vector
progress in the same direction:
forward.

Annabelle grew sick and tired
of the word. Forward. As if direction
were something quantifiable;
as if forward were the only
means to success

What would happen
if in this law
the direction the force vector and acceleration vector
moved in was backward?
Would anyone object? Who would
dare say it was not the direction
of a world moving at the speed of light (299792458 m/s)?

Who would object to the pausing of output,
to the ceasing of heartless production,
to the prevention of time’s relentless effects?

But time, according to the laws of motion, continues
to gain F as the mass of the world increases
and soon our hearts get a little heavier
and Annabelle’s thighs are creased with stretch marks,
and her skin fades into nothingness,
and her lips evaporate into thin air,
and her eyes metabolize into liquid
and she no longer knows how old she is, how old she was, how old she will be,
and time keeps on going,
keeps on accelerating, and is the only variable we know.

III. For every action there is an equal and opposite reaction.

Picture Annabelle:
She is seventy-two,
lying breathlessly on the ground.

Dissect her:
Tell me what you find.
Perhaps you find a broken globular dream-world, perhaps you find remnants

of an accelerating life.

Rummage through her:
Veins, stories, cartridges
of dying ink.

Picture her birth:
Bright, calm, serene.
React

Picture her death:
Dark, quiet, passing.
Produce

Today
somewhere
Annabelle is being born,
fresh and new and alive,
and somewhere too
Annabelle is dying.

 

 

 

 

Meghana MysoreMeghana Mysore is a senior at Lake Oswego High School where she writes and edits for the newspaper and literary magazine. Her work has been published in YARN, Burningword, Canvas, Crashtest, VoiceCatcher, Alexandria Quarterly, Cuckoo Quarterly, Stepping Stones, The Writers’ Slate, and more. She is the recipient of several Gold and Silver Keys from Scholastic Art & Writing and an Honorable Mention from the Nancy Thorp Poetry Contest. “Laws of Motion” has been previously published in Burningword Literary Journal and Cuckoo Quarterly.

Amanda Mabel is a fashion and portrait photographer living in Sydney, Australia. Originally from Singapore, she moved to Perth in 2011, then Sydney in 2012. She is currently studying a Bachelor of Arts (Advanced) (Honours) at the University of Sydney. In her free time, she loves taking photographs, travelling to beautiful places, and drinking tea. She also happens to blog for Vogue Australia Spy Style. She maintains a website at www.amandamabel.com and can be found on:  Instagram  Facebook  LinkedIn  Pinterest  Tumblr  Bloglovin Flickr.

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