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Michelle Bitting: Sudden

was the fire
like a wolf at a live heart

So many things
seemed filled with intent
to be lost

but the only lasting truth was change

and if you had a limitless
life
it would be a real problem

for you
Still

I wanted to come home transformed
and be surprised by the flickering

in our radically impermanent
robes

rain-soaked
and ringed with succulents

around
a tiled patio

where you’d put the fairy lights up

The mysterious nature of it—

all our rooms
all our ash

now a form in emptiness
to visit

Life
as it really is

The inconsolable
losses

The molten
heart

~~~~

Author’s note: On January 7, 2025, our home in Pacific Palisades burned to the ground along with over 50% of the town. I have walked through and visited the area several times now. The scope of destruction is overwhelming, unfathomable. All hyperbole applies. To the Palisades and Alta Dena burn sites both. Comfort comes with community and the greater human impulses to connect, support, and create anew. Such loving, magnificent energy we’ve felt and witnessed first-hand astonishes as much as the original firestorm itself. We managed to wrest a few treasures from their crypt of cinders & ash or at least to photograph them, including the ruined beauty of my old doctoral mortar boards and 1957 Royal Quiet De Luxe typewriter. 

Bio: Michelle Bitting is the author of six poetry collections, including Nightmares & Miracles (Two Sylvias Press, 2022), winner of the Wilder Prize and named one of Kirkus Reviews 2022 Best of Indie. Her chapbook Dummy Ventriloquist was published in 2024 by C & R Press. Bitting is Senior Lecturer in Creative Writing and Literature at Loyola Marymount University. 

Poem and photo copyright 2025 Michelle Bitting


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20 comments on “Michelle Bitting: Sudden

  1. Lisa Zimmerman
    March 23, 2025
    Lisa Zimmerman's avatar

    A clear, beautiful, grievous poem.

    “all our rooms
    all our ash” 💔

    Like

    • Michelle Bitting
      March 23, 2025
      Michelle Bitting's avatar

      Thank you.

      Like

  2. Robert Wrigley
    March 22, 2025
    Robert Wrigley's avatar

    Living as we do in a wild fire zone (albeit a much more rural one), this poem moves me enormously. We imagine making a run for it; we imagine the loss of, well, everything–inconsolable, for sure. But this poem regards that inconsolability and responds with “life as it really is,” which is to say, somehow we go on. That’s the essential human truth, and poems help make that clear.

    Keep on, keep on.

    Liked by 1 person

    • Vox Populi
      March 22, 2025
      Vox Populi's avatar

      Thanks, Bob.

      >

      Like

    • Michelle Bitting
      March 22, 2025
      Michelle Bitting's avatar

      Thank you so much, Robert. It means a lot to me.

      Like

  3. Marty Williams
    March 22, 2025
    Marty Williams's avatar

    This, from your ashes, stunning, just as the grass in the photo promises renewal.

    Liked by 2 people

    • Michelle Bitting
      March 22, 2025
      Michelle Bitting's avatar

      Thank you, Marty.

      Like

  4. boehmrosemary
    March 22, 2025
    boehmrosemary's avatar

    “So many things
    seemed filled with intent
    to be lost

    but the only lasting truth was change”

    Like

  5. William Palmer
    March 22, 2025
    William Palmer's avatar

    “the fire
    like a wolf at a live heart”–what a stunning beginning

    Like

  6. Laure-Anne Bosselaar
    March 22, 2025
    Laure-Anne Bosselaar's avatar

    I hold you to my heart, petite Miche. Your poem “a form of emptiness” so full of “inconsolable losses”…

    Liked by 2 people

    • Michelle Bitting
      March 22, 2025
      Michelle Bitting's avatar

      Thank you, Love. I feel you.

      Like

  7. jmnewsome93c0e5f9cd
    March 22, 2025
    jmnewsome93c0e5f9cd's avatar

    Empathy survives, even among cinders and ash. And the photograph: such ruined beauty. But it catches the sympathetic eye. Thanks for sharing the verbal and visual imagery. The firestorm of our time brought home.

    Liked by 2 people

  8. Sean Sexton
    March 22, 2025
    Sean Sexton's avatar

    Michelle:

    a staggering poem to imbibe this cold morning in Florida.
    How even the lines seem burned down to essential words, everything otherwise—missing.

    Fire has visited a true master of verse!

    Liked by 4 people

    • Vox Populi
      March 22, 2025
      Vox Populi's avatar

      Yes, the poem seems to be seared down to the essential ground.

      >

      Liked by 2 people

    • Michelle Bitting
      March 22, 2025
      Michelle Bitting's avatar

      Wow, gosh, thank you, Sean!

      Like

  9. ncanin
    March 22, 2025
    ncanin's avatar

    but the only lasting truth was change

    Yes,

    Liked by 3 people

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