The Astro-Physicist Goes Home For Lunch

(Previously titled "There's More to Black Holes Than Gravity, from the collection of Physics poetry: Could There Be A Big-Bang If No One Was There To Hear It?")

On guileless, toddler knees I crawl 
toward the moist, elemental region, 
in the star nursery where her legs collide;

knowing I will measure gravity, 
check voice messages and reconcile 
my bank statement later this afternoon.

For, it’s my job to estimate eternity. 
I’m paid a salary to calculate infinity. 

I tell visitors I love to climb mountains, 
love the thin difficult air,
the unrelenting vistas 
that curve past understanding.… 

My unofficial title could be “Galaxy Counter”. 
But I like to think of myself 
as an explainer of things.

And, this I have found:
The universe is void and without form 
before the damp, pink singularity 
at the shadowy fork of her limbs, 
where time is born.