Ode to Being OK

It could be worse.
We all know it could be worse.
In an age of orange peels 
stretched across your face
as an impromptu mask and
hair-string threads of temper
so taut you can strum their rage,
it could be worse.

It could be worse.
Tchaikovsky could be alive.
Which would mean we, too, 
lived with Tchaikovsky
and are just as likely to die
from the plague as he.

‘It could be worse,’
I mumble to myself,
stuck in traffic
until my pupils glow
with the gleam of taillights,
and the only perfume I wear
is the musk of sweat and exhaust.

But, still.

It could be worse.
I could have crashed by now.
I could have crashed 
a hundred million times before,
my bones a husk of steel and wiring
my teeth winking with rearview mirror shards
that say ‘objects may be closer than they appear’
my last memory the screech of tires,
or maybe strings?
I’d never know.

It could be worse.
In the way that hazelnut brownies
are better than no brownies at all,
maybe it doesn’t matter when
the brownies have too many nuts,
and you can feel the cold sweat 
gathering on your brow
that’ll soak your sheets tonight
as you eat them,
like the ringing in your ears
when a violinist strains for a note
just a little bit too high.

But, hey.
It could be worse.
There could be no brownies
and no music at all.

I wanted to write about joy
but being ok
is close enough.