
Simona Carini was born in Perugia, Italy. She writes poetry and nonfiction and has been published in various venues, in print and online. Her first poetry collection Survival Time is published by Sheila-Na-Gig Editions. She lives in Northern California with her husband, loves to spend time outdoors, and works as an academic researcher. Her website is https://simonacarini.com
like a Hawksbill turtle biting off a sponge.
With a long exhale, I descended into cobalt blue,
slow-danced down the side of a sheer coral wall,
the echoing sound of breathing in my ears,
water all around me, happy medium, liquid breeze.
A pair of French angelfish—flat black bodies brightened
by yellow-rimmed scales—darted in unison,
a Reef shark shot downward and disappeared.
Buoyant, I swam along the wall, looked for creatures
into crevices, drew back, held by the womblike deep.
An Arrow crab perched on coral on its spindly legs,
a frilly leaf crawled, revealed itself a Lettuce sea slug.
My body belonged to the moment,
as I converged on a sea anemone
and searched for its tenant Pederson cleaning shrimp
hiding among the stinging tentacles.
The dive computer guided my slow ascent,
the safety stop granted a few more minutes to embrace
schools of fish, coral heads, gorgonians swaying in the current,
I pulled away and inched back to the surface,
glare in my eyes, staggered up the boat’s ladder
with heavy gear I would shed and slip on weights awaiting—
pounds of worries and anxiety. I fought the urge to let go
of the handrail, back into the water, into the blue.