The kind that clenches your abdomen
Like menstruation,
And then it was only once, not monthly.  
I once asked a cosmologist 
about his poetic tendencies, I thought I caught 
a glimmer, it was in fact, a pungent reaction. 
The mere concept was rejected as any preposterous old electron
Would be out of line. Needless to say, the hypothesis was
Brushed off like the free radical 
I was standing there, circling him
And trying to get in-closer.
I was the chicken laying an egg,
Peeking inside his paradox. 
In hindsight, it was foolish, 
Asking an astrophysicist, a theoretical one, anyway
About his propensity with words, metaphorically,
In lieu of his numerical potency,
Silly me, little lady.
Considering I am entitled to (k)no(w) facts,
In my female tone, I displayed
A type of  indiscretion, often a woman’s way
Of adding verbs to scientific theory.  
Photo credited to National Photo Company; c. 1919, Restored by Adam Cuerden [Public domain or Public domain], via Wikimedia Commons.
