Science  Write  Now

Share article

‘[11] Sodium’ first appeared in Tricia Dearborn, Autobiochemistry (UWAP, 2019). It also appeared in Bianca Nogrady (ed.), The Best Australian Science Writing 2019 (NewSouth Publishing).

11 Na Sodium

a metal so light it floats

a metal you can cut with a knife

a metal never found free in nature

 

when a shaving is pared away

sodium’s cut surface

shines glorious silver

 

but tarnishes in seconds

that incredible lustre

transformed to the dull grey of sodium oxides

 

heated in air, sodium burns

with a brilliant golden-yellow flame

tossed into water, it explodes

 

neat sodium must be swaddled

in a nonreactive substance

stored under kerosene, under oil

 

I wanted to be the pure metal

solely myself, self-sufficient,

swaddled in the safety

 

of needing no one

now I know we’re never pure

beginning as we do as admixture

 

a dollop

of the genetically new,

from the outset, chemically intermingled

 

then we separate, but never completely

even when we feel entirely alone

our mirror neurons

 

prove us liars, firing

when we see the other damaged

or delighted, as if it were

 

our hand

poked with a blunt needle

or stroked by another’s hand

 

I grew up in a house of liars

a houseful of people

pretending to be separate       

 

but humans are never

found free in nature

it’s how we’re designed — connection

 

as vital as oxygen

intermingled, impure

we shine