
The Second Law of Thermodynamics
By Elizabeth Lindsey
A degree of disorder or uncertainty in a system, like
bombs that barely work or lessons from my father.
Creating while it
destroys, cat-like and breathing, it
feels every corner of infinity and pushes it forward, folding
gaps into families and the lives of
high school girls that feel d-
isordered and lazy where something else should be. You taught me your dreams,
just in case I would turn out just like you, like father, like daughter, just kidding and unseriousness weighing on your shoulders now where the
lack of gravity should have been, an astronaut being able to bear casualties—or
maybe actually an astrophysicist, except now you tell me not to dream away my life.
Questions you held, on space & time, if piercing the line between praise and permanency is enough or
because amazing things happen when they're irreversible, will we survive? These
questions, once charred into molars, now have their very own place everywhere. Life gets
stretched out, the distance betweeneverything increases, like
the distance between stars and even me & you. Growing up, I thought you were too complex to
understand, but according to the second law of thermodynamics, simplicity and disorder can be
very synonymous—
we just keep expelling chaos because we need to live, praying on
X’s & O’s and things that take us back for a while, like David Bowie’s The Rise and Fall of
Ziggy Stardust playing from your car radio, living simply in between dazed lyrics.
"Even though this law is as cynical as it is, that which could be our end is our growth, entropy consumes, / nests chaos and entanglement inside imperfect things, allowing life to weasel out of impossibility."
Even though this law is as cynical as it is, that which could be our end is our growth, entropy consumes,
nests chaos and entanglement inside imperfect things, allowing life to weasel out of impossibility.
Things just wind down at
right or wrong times, it doesn’t matter and everything matters have overlapped then grown apart—
only we were never able to get our hands on something as unworldly as
patience, but we’ve got the time to wait around because
you told me, thanks to science, things can never decrease.In an isolated system,There’sonlyspace
for more space.
About the Artist...
Shawn Ivonnet is an 11th grade Visual Artist student at Douglas Anderson School of the Arts. They most often paint portraits and use acrylic paint.