D.A. Powell's "Chronic" showcases the horror of orientation toward declining objects through elegiac references to chronic illness, the fractured sense of self in the speaker, and the broken line of interrogation of the "I" throughout the poem.
As the body—and, all bodies—are always-already in decline, the speaker in the poem expresses understanding that life is an expression of the dead: even as we live, or fly, or sing, the act is a dual image of its opposite: silence, inertia, darkness.
Images of illness resound through the poem, and those images encounter a sense of loss in the speaker, who is already mourning something unseen and in the future. The futurity of loss, here, is horrific: unattainable, yet present at all times.
The "I" in the poem is confused and disoriented by what is seen—indeed, by what is already lost, but to the "I," rather than the objects losing—and recognizes not a loss but a distance of the thing desired.
The images of the already-lost object wound up in the viewer elicit both awe and horror, lending the speaker with a sense of disorientation, as the hyperobject of climate change and the Anthropocene loom and fracture.