The pages of my journal are gold-speckled on the top margin. Here in the upper right corner of the left page I dutifully record the date – day/month/year. I recently started adding the day of the week because lately they seem to be slipping, one into another.
Seventeen pairs of gold spirals arch gracefully down the center, binding my thoughts and keeping my days in order. The white pages are faintly lined, but I don’t adhere to them. Instead my words float, dip and sprawl the page.
Sometimes I fill only half of the left page. Sometimes my pen spills my early morning musings over into the right page and the spacing becomes tighter as I to try and contain them. Two days ago the pages remained blank – except for the lower portion of the right page.
This spot is now reserved for the daily statistics: world cases, US cases, deaths…
I recently added the number of those recovered because I need a glimmer of hope to sparkle here at the bottom of the page too. Tomorrow, it seems, we may surpass one million.
I’ve added South Africa to my stats because, well you know, you’re there. Deaths there remain in the single digits.

Day Two of Na/GloPoWriMo prompts us to write a poem about a specific place. My poem perhaps is less about a place than a space. My journal has lately become an even more sacred space to retreat to in the early morning when the house is quiet.