When I was young, my family had
a 3-D image of the Apollo 11 landing
on top of the ledge of the doorway,
the first man on the moon.
I asked my father why the craft was named
Apollo,
not Artemis,
since she was the goddess of the moon,
and Apollo, the god of the sun.
He didn’t have a good answer,
I think he muttered the sun reflects
on the moon, and that’s where its
light comes from.
I didn’t buy it.
I believe the ship was named
Apollo because he was a man,
and Artemis, a woman.
Even in space, men made the rules.
Fast forward to now.
Artemis 2 went around the moon.
Was she named
Artemis
because all the little girls like me had
the same question? Because the ship that goes
to the moon should be named
after the goddess of the moon.
We are living in a time where human beings have gone where
no one has gone before, and it’s bewildering to think
the world still turns, we have the same
issues, not everyone has enough,
people die senselessly every day,
are born every minute,
some have no purpose and want
to end their lives, wars rage and children
are murdered,
but the Earth still floats
in space
It will continue until no more humans are here.
But we could go out there.
To see if we’re alone, to possibly
find a magnanimous culture to smack some
sense into the beings on this planet
to tell us we deserve the peace
universally sought,
to dream a dream
of the goddess of the moon,
going further and further,
than anyone else in the history
of this planet we call home.
Shannon O'Connor lives in the Boston area where she works and writes. She travels when she can, in order to find inspiration and worlds outside her sphere. She is the chairperson of the Boston Chapter of the National Writers Union. She can be found on her Substack, Ms. Hen's World.


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