Taking a Wyeth Walk

 

Geese overhead and nesting in the lowlands. Who returns. Who remains. A knowing suggests the difference between the curling edges of the universe and its unraveling dwelling place within. Coil as you must, lovely – it's ever and always okay.

In the dream, I escorted a drunken monk through the weeping stone walls and alleys of some ancient town. I held back the cowl when he vomited; together we moved on.

Bright chirping now escorts dreams and dreamers into dawn. Daffodils not-yet-yellow and tender tulips reaching towards uncommitted blue. Almost a foot of snowfall in the forecast for tonight; expectations nurture an elegant despair.

Krisnamurti returns. We are always taking a Wyeth walk, peeking in on sleeping dogs or stretching out through graying horizons. Can love be sliced into sacred and sinful? How far must the image fade before one understands their own entangled ideas?

We sat in the car and listened to the rain turn to snow. To be abandoned to this moment is to sense the kind of beauty that is love. Between the gentle clinks on glass, we breathed. I came upon love without seeking it all those years ago, and it fell into me, outside of time – outside of commitment and responsibility and duty and slavery. It was this love that was of one and of many.

I'm tired of the observer and the observed. Give me the austerity of a lost yesterday and forgotten tomorrow. Do you love me? Then give me now.

 

The Purple Chalice

In bed, a swath of sun warms my ankles with sacred geometry. To stare out the window is to calculate expectations framed in a square. There's always a code, my love. Or, my love is always a code.

The crocus' purple chalice holds springtime's promises. How his saffron keeps me! When the wild seed blows there is nothing to do but wonder. Perception tells me I am neither broken nor whole. But east is still east; my face yet turns this way every morning so that I may track what rises and falls in the course of existence.

A glimmering thread connects the Azalea leaves in dawn's rush to become Sunday. When Africa was once your home, all proliferation becomes migration. At least, that's what every blessing feels like when I am no longer wiping her red dust from my sandals.

This time of year, everyone leaves. No machines hum in the upkeep of appearances. No cars on the streets. Instead, a flock of turkeys tip toe through suburbia's nap. Deer tracks under the pine in the backyard. Daffodil buds relenting to slanted persuasion.

Spring / I love you / his must-be-present-to-win / theology

The seasons, rotation of the earth, and the stars all say the same thing: the hunger of the universe cannot be satisfied in our understanding. The system opens beyond the system. Have you felt the kiss of a thousand rain drops rolling off the low branches? Are we the ripple or the other? The rain or the branch? Metaphysics aside, we mostly think that we are the water which can only see through watery eyes.

The matriarch will kill you to defend her family. She knows what is right. Yet she is a female, prone to the nuances of undetectable change. At times, what she knows will not translate. Do you trust her?

April rains – another form of gray with immediate results. Rest. Repair. And remove what cannot stay. So goes the work before the fullness of June.

 

 

 

Wending the Way

Even the snowfall knows spring is near –

The weekend gives time for my hands to heal. There is a certain way in which a body hurts that provokes a joy girded by ongoing moments. Sinewy strings cross thighs and haunches to anchor into the hip. They are acute and I am aware.

In the sluggish dream before dawn, the two clans were fighting an ancient war at the bottom of two lifeless hills. I stood at the top and saw the end before the end. As I made my way into the family barn, I told the leaders that they would die with their tribe unless they hid. I am the messenger.

There is ivy holding the tree and there is ivy streaming over and through the brave privacy fence. We keep fighting nature to preserve the work we think we are meant to perform or keep or endure. But what about water under the bridge? The coffee is cold and the deck is rotted through yet the ease of water wending the way is effortless and a joy a to behold!

She that is me also knows a certain way, and she must walk it. Maybe in ink, maybe in tears. Well anyway, I'm pretty sure Kenya and her elephants have forgotten my name by now.

robin
in the dogwood

cardinal
in the bush –

I suckle
at the songs
of swelling

 

 

Failed Monks and Stranniks on the Way Home

Snow and other missives finding the way.

Lately, Russian stouts with a creamy espresso head. Rasputin and other failed monks have a lot to say in the way of seduction, especially when moonshadows stretch hungrily between the chinks in the bedroom window blinds. The glow grabs me, and I grab back.

The days lengthen enough to reach the dead places of winter's territorial campaign. I peel the plastic off the windows before the temperatures warm because that is what eagerness looks like. The inside pallor exchanged for the crisp hints of onion and earth.

At the greenhouse, my glasses fog over before adjusting. When I arrive in the mornings before the machines are turned on, it feels like I am on the moon. The quiet calamity of thousands of plants, growing and being.

All day I plunge pinky-sized flower plugs into pots and flats and baskets. For the first time in years, I explore the world as an escaped convict – a body freed from the atrocities of the mind. When one leaves, she does not return entirely the same.

Woodsmoke hanging over praying roofs. I remember goat stew on the compound and how it took the entire day to prepare. Everyone gathered and not even an eyeball was wasted. The dogs circled enslaved by instinct. We sang songs and our children slid down the grassy hill on scraps of cardboard. Things were simpler there. Sing. Share. Survive. Jayber Crow and I, stranniks on the way home.

I am different now. Shifted. Softer. Sullen through the absence of highland clarity.

One more beer to shoulder the load. So my dreams slur; what's the big deal? Spring will be here soon and it will no longer be a trauma to remember hard, frozen things. If I write what I'm thinking, the whole world will fall apart. For now, please accept the remnant “this” – a this I used to be.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Indigo Beliefs

Buttered toast and tangerines. Tea today, if you please. Ribbons of dawn festoon under the remnants of an enduring night. I watch light glint under the weighted authority of lingering clouds. In other words, one may be forced to accept what grieves her.

Yesterday's wind bellowed and roared and refused to became background noise. All day my nerves startled at the thudding of deadfall upon the roof. Yes Winter, get it all out of your system. Clear the way for the overdue ending.

Lately, hope is small, like a sparrow's eye. A cold snap brings reluctant flakes.

There is beauty in the incompleteness of it all despite the serration of winter / almost spring / winter.

Gossamer brumes of indigo give way to a filling moon. At the local brewery, he played the blues with an occasional cover tune to distract a disinterested crowd from their conversations about suburban affairs. I milked two black beers before turning towards the night's omniscient ability to give back whatever I have left. And when it was time to go home, it was seen under the flickering street lamp next to a drowsy highway that like the moon, no one person will have all of me. And in the end, the ever unobtainable end, even matter is lost.

I am a believer: what is perceived is not all. The “we” proclaim is not permanent. I am not real.

 

 

The Phantom Trail of Fireflies

 

Snow covers the early thaw – a winter flirting with leaving for good. Too quickly one lets a hibernating heart hope. Daffodil bulbs cracking too soon.

I am only asking that you refill the coffee if you take the last of it. When shelving the old mugs still warm from the dishwasher, I somehow think of you. Another life, perhaps. Or maybe it was the time I added cinnamon at the bean level and you said: way to fuck up a good cup of coffee!

Daffies, coffee, and the phantom trail of fireflies.

Lightning didn't make sense on the last day of February but it was not unwelcome. Saffron flashes turned night-snow from moony ice to soft cream. But no thunder – only the soft decrescendo of the train leaving town, westward.

I watched the storm in its entirety because the sparks of light offered a rubber band snap of sorts to the deadened underside of the wrists. Let's talk about depression, okay? And I'm going to skip the poetry of it because it takes a lot of effort to dress up the fact that I haven't taken a shower in over a week.

The kids visit me in my black room and ask ever-so-softly if they can get me anything. My husband morns me; what else can he do?

But B. texts from school to say that he saw a red-winged blackbird on the bridge between the freshman campus and the main building. Mom, I wanted to tell you because I knew it would make you happy.

And in a single instant, I was never happier.

The black tars eventually must give me up. Every day the impossible is gathered when, for others and for love itself, I try again.

maybe soon
for the sake of me
I will buy a bathing suit
so I can swim with my family
between the banks of spring and autumn
leaving behind the black cloak
of she who always was
too heavy for  
resurrection

 

 

 

Waiting on Trillium

I open in the wake of one full day of sunlight in such a way that now I sleep under a blanket of Trillium.

It is as simple as breathing to be destroyed by the unexpected beauty of a day that doesn't belong. Yet the gurus and the enlightened walk with their hearts forward even in the mundane slog of drudgery. I've read the books, drank the Kool-Aid, but slanting shadows still make a difference!

The writing boils like two-day-old coffee. Acidic. Thick. It used to have a home I knew. Now the words push the forest floor like a bloated slug making a slow path of slime and life.

I didn't protect the rose bush this year. This and other ways I let lovely beings down. When I cry about it, I am like an empty church at night – hollow and waiting for the congregants to make me holy.

When choosing seeds, one forgets about the wilds. We are dedicated to tending the domesticated. One way to shift the expectation of cultivation may be to simply be who I am. I can do anything for a time, but I must follow the scent of wilderness when it comes to me.

The temperature rises to twice the seasonal norm. Neighbors pour out of hibernation, coughing and wheezing from quarantine. They take advantage of the warmth to rake and remove months of winter's slough. I sit still in the sun, a thief for what I want. Who can have me anymore?

The sea is still and rough, swirling with invitation and foreboding flirtation. And I sit on his shores, half in for the chance to feel an untamed embrace, up to my neck.

leave it be / return –
I can only follow
the essence
of free

 

 

The Flutters of Interior Sparrows

 

The wind in pines, the cuckoo clock clicking – ticking – almost sticking, leaves skittering across the rot of winter . . . the day begs for the demolition of structure. And chocolate.

At the heart of everything that I cannot remember is an interior room described by poets and lovers. They perform the weathering that leads to a redemptive leakage – a certain scent that unlocks a memory long since dead. It has to be that I am weathered for the greater All because if that is not true, then the woman who is me exists for nothing more than narrow desire. The divine element within recognizes itself in the flutters of interior sparrows. Though I cannot say it, you must know what truth I mean. You must know your role in this economy of the ineffable, no?

Everything that leads to this indirect knowledge has been suspect from the beginning. Decades marking every detail have passed but I only seem to get mired in the myopic awareness of endless perceptions. I'm tired. Even though there has been beauty and destruction beyond description, there is some place within that grows so very weak and bored. When dreaming, one can feel the understanding without the duality of words or the systematic cataloguing thoughts. So what then should remain – to dream or wake? Lovers or abstention? Prayer or emptiness?

The material existence leaves me pale in February's white heart. When spring arrives I'm sure my first sunburn will be not be cursed or forgotten. The ways in which I remind myself to “be here” are infinite, and when I forget, there is always this breath and then the next one.

In the dark, I smelled the skunk and called the dog in early. She knows my intentions a moment before they're presented, though agreeing with them is another matter. She runs and puts us both at risk; I'm sure there is a symbolic meaning in that.

For a few hours, sun, and nothing can bind me. Yet by lunch, the clouds remember their place as my impenetrable oppressor. The trill of sunlight turns to a slog of housework, but at least there is apple crisp!

Listen, dearest: as the leaves curl and turn towards their fall, as snow covers the decay only to give way to rebirth, as April turns tulips into butterflies and summer kisses my throat with lakes, the imprint of what you open remains in me.

You remain.

 

 

Wending the Woods of Winter

Morning's glow arrives like a softer song, barely at first, building unto the untouchable refrain. At least some light is known for a few early hours. The usual accompaniments – the woodpecker, a west-bound train fading, the neighbor's dog left out in the cold too long.

In a dream, an old door shedding its paint slants on weathered hinges. I love the door as much as I love the idea of walking beyond its body. Hands spend time learning the country of warped wood, no longer able to fully cover the brittle bones of once-mighty oak. There is no fear of the darkness beyond, but the cool doorknob fits perfectly in my palm. So I linger.

Yet there is a kaleidoscope cloud ahead of this place and it pulses a dazzling invitation. And I can't trust it. For a week straight I have writhed between feverish fits and the stone-skinned, melancholy months strung together like some sort of seamless dying. And in those moments, that is all there is. There are no spring flowers bursting through the drab leftovers of winter's leave. There is no chorus of red winged blackbirds claiming cattails and low-hanging phone wires along the backroad. There is no dalliance in the writer's cabin deep in the forest's embrace.

Instead, there are moon shadows, and the black tears of my pen, and the unaffordable apples gleaming in an aisle filled with tasteless winter produce. One dilates in hopes that the lens will allow more light; soon I will disappear and that is the whole point, right?

There is a certain distance that a soul ignores. From my bed, I track the shadows smiling across the snow.

Every letter is hindsight. Every sentence is a bloodletting of where it was happening a moment ago. It is with this truth that I etch “x's” across the wrist with my fingernails in hopes of maybe feeling the body remaining present. Anchored. Real.

yet I wend
in the woods
of winter

 

The Flickering

When we abandon temples to walk onward in the furious snow.

The messiah floats between sky and ground – a man on his back in the blue-green sea, a snowflake teasing out the masterpiece, ash climbing on woodsmoke.  

A single verse flickers above the wind. I stay awake listening to it drop. Parchment leaves. Jay feathers. Pine cones. Snow drifting over rotting fences.

In the dream of stillness, a monk stands in darkness listening to a faraway train weep further and again, further. She casts her mindfulness unto the minor chord, letting out the line as needed. Stone by stone the monastery becomes unnecessary.

We helped him bury his pet and the entire world fell into that hole. A child's pain magnified in his mother's heart. In the ache I am startled to stop and see. Can I vow to never arrive as his source of pain? Who we love, first.

we take our leave / another way / from hand to hand / for the legion and for one / resist

 

 

 

He Am I

Everything wakes softer with a dog sigh and new snow. But it's been twenty days without moon or stars or sun. Only a little pulse remains and it's hard to do anything but curl up in bed to keep it safe.

January passes her child bride off to February, and his icy hand slips up her skirt. He chews his scotch first, which is a kindness only unto himself. And just like that, a man in charge takes down the entire world.

The book I want to read is under the therapy lamp so it can raise the light higher – like a bible as a doorstop or a cookbook as a dog pillow. Winter wraps me in a cement vest that has no zippers or ties. One step forward. Rest. Repeat.

A woodpecker meters tall tales, commissioning a snowy codicil here and there to float to the earth. My breathing falls in line with his drumming. A moment soothed. 

We guessed at far I would have to drive to find full days of sun. Why can't I adapt? The birds crowd the feeder and squirrels grab fallen bounty from the ground. Rabbits, opossum, and deer; all remain.

Neither holy nor wise. Yet now, even my work cannot be completed. The withered shoots of hasta blooms poke at the sky, even after being buried and reburied a dozen times. Mental gravity playing games.

Curried red lentils with spinach, over brown rice. I feel the heat all the way down and use the bowl to warm my hands. We use more bowls than plates around here, that's for sure. Does the president know that he is raping the world with a smile on his face? The religious are asleep, even in their anger. He am I...and I hate him.

A logomachy of the mind, no? Or is it more than that? My nose bleeds easily these days so I carry tissues waded in my pocket, along side the trust of anyone in command. Lake effect snow marks the trail from Lake Michigan inland – water, sky, crystal, me. In the end, it is I who needs to see it another way.

 

 

 

Crane-Folded Envelopes

The day muted me. Every thing is put on hold and subdued accordingly. After errands, I crawled into bed to watch a Hemingway movie. For awhile, empathy was my superpower; now it is how quickly I become unavailable.

In a sleepless jag, I found a youtube video that played music at a frequency that could induce lucid dreaming. For hours, my not-quite-sleeping mind was some sort of freakish circus. I woke with the exhaustion that comes from playing a game of “tag” whereby I'm the fastest one running, yet I sort of want to be caught. Have you noticed how many people are more clear in the abstract?

The one true sentence reinvents itself, but I still know it when it arrives. This and other things I am unable to say.

Writing here was about saving myself until I saw the bondage in my own freedom. The crane-folded envelopes surrendered to every touch of my devoted fingers. Words were threaded into sentences and translated with ease into the love letters I never knew I'd write. All this hemorrhaging. But unmasked, I can see it is more than blood. More than folded notes nestling in paper sleeves. More than criss-crossing touch points that blared: what else can you make of this?!

In the '80's I had this sweatshirt that I cut to make the neck hole big enough so that it slipped over my right shoulder. Always the right shoulder. Why is this all so inevitable – like spring after winter's tomb, like cheese and a hardy Russian stout on cheat day?

One reader, one love. But with the masks coming off and the universe at bloom in the dinner prep and laundry and movie night at home on the couch with takeout and the whole family, then how can one allow the horizon to define the direction?

Naked in the exam room, every inch on my skin is examined by the PA while Crosby, Stills and Nash croon in harmonious duality, “Love the One You're With.” The universe drips from the ceiling as the assistant makes small talk about travel and marching band and hospital buyouts. I'm not as friendly as usual because sometimes I'm just too tired.

No birds. No tracks. No sun leaking into misty eyes. No sequel in the works.

Only here. Only now. Are we together?

 

 

 

 

Because of the Owl

3 a.m. / awake / the owl and I

Coos and cries climb into the night air and I lift into every note. In this birdless winter his presence proves everything and nothing. For an hour I listen until finally,  s  i  l  e   n   c   e  .

When the king of gods fell in love with a shepherd boy, the king became a large bird and flew down from the heavens to collect the boy. Legend has it that Zeus loved him for his soul and his mind, and thus the boy became the only lover granted immortality. This boy now serves as the cup-bearer forever, a constellation of service and brilliance. For the one born unto this path, may you serve the sweet wine among immortals, soothing and swaying the powerful with the charm of your destiny.

The day begins early because of the owl. I abandon sleep for the mental rehearsal of Monday's events and demands. When he travels, I become wildly efficient – some how driven to keep a one-oared boat going in the right direction.

For days now, the fog impresses with its stubbornness. Though startled after supper by pin pricks of light deep in the sky's heart, the transient glimmer would surrender to the obscurity of misplaced warmth.

Therefore, the predawn hush loved more deeply than a heart deserves.

 

 

 

Postcards from Nearly There

The book finally arrives in the mail – a tangible connection to a conversation that begins as advice and ends with fingers folding as proxy into monosyllabic “oh.”

A certain greed in regards to my hands wrapped around a new book. The first page – the first impressions – the first sentence; there is only one first time. The words could be totally incoherent, yet there is that moment after the crack of the spine when the entire universe lies between my two thumbs. Yes, also this “oh.”

The author swims in choppy strokes as he speaks of lovers and love. But did he mean Love?

Sliced bell peppers, homemade hummus, and strawberries for dessert. Only mason jars are left to drink from now but they are my favorite, so I tend them.

Daylight's escape deferred a little longer. Did you see that too? Even without the sun's touch, a prudent charm. I was desperate at one time, but now I am aware of the slow bloom, opening into that which rises. Light tracked. Love manifest.

The dog and the opossum both play dead so we breach the numbing rain to pull her back into the house. All night, an opossum in the window well. Wanting something else. Not satisfied with its limits. Can love fill itself?

Lately, the narrow truth flows into the greater. I set the glass of wine on the book but then worry, and move it to the wooden dresser. Dampened wood is a comfort, maybe like the red scar and the umber blur coming together on the surface.    

Aurobindo visits and I am cordial. We share light under the pretense that maybe finally I have nothing to say. Instead, water to wine and other miracles. Post cards from nearly there: I miss you.

 

 

 

A Wink and a Whistle

In a faint rain, on a trail rising from the ravines, I passed a graying man and his young Great Dane. Our dogs met, which is also to say that the man and I met in the common custom of dog owners. In a unexpected lumbering leap the Great Dane put his paws on my shoulders, slathering my face with mud and white frothy slime. Dropping his pipe and then with great tenderness, the gray gentleman pleaded with the giant to pick on someone his own size. Eye to eye, light to light, the man leaned into my space, wiping what he could from my jacket. His sand-papery voice said, “If I were on a island and destined to die there, I might rather choose five dogs than five people as my last companions. Please forgive my friend's need to hug you.” And with a wink and whistle, he and the Great Dane carried onward deeper into the gorge.

At home, I eat out-of-state raspberries and try my best to manage a tangerine with manners. Is it possible to keep the juice all in? Friends text to say that they heard the sun might break through tomorrow: happy dance, smiley face, #michiganwinter, #grayisthenewblack, lol. I will celebrate today and let tomorrow find me both wanting and happy.

Emily's Letters, ginger snaps and a house full of silence. It isn't until letter three that I notice my naked ring finger. Letting it breathe means some times forgetting. I retrace my steps to the edge of the bathtub and find the wedding band resting in the ablution of water and dog shampoo. One wonders how long it takes for the impression to refill itself.

But I don't want to write about that. I want to take a nap and see something other than haylofts and strobing dust motes hanging in the filtered light. I want to wake and think of something other than the warm hand placement and fingered bookshelves and looking up at the ceiling from the shivery wooden floor.

At times Eden is a desert and at others it is the sign pointing a way around the sand. In either case, I saw this person staggering barefoot in the hot sands and I thought: yes, this one is yet alive.

 

 

Leaking Towards Lower Ground

The 4 a.m. crack of winter thunder interrupts the rain's whispery conversation. I thought of the stroll the nurse and I had through the hospital's sterile labyrinth. We talked about the weather and she laughed satisfyingly hard when I describe this winter as “hormonal.”

Dawn gives way to islands of snow, fading. The dog's toys have surfaced and the walking paths are free to snake around the entirety of the yard. Patterns and cycles and cadences all make sense if one is allowed to zoom out far enough. I wonder how often we've met – January and I.  How many times has it melted when the world was meant to be frozen?

Water with lemon and black bean soup. In the comfortable cabin of my woods, I would live on soup and bread. Only the one who wants to be there is there – to read and walk and play into the cedar-scented sleep. We walk the whole way. Thus this softer, sweeter place. The mind leaks towards lower ground.

These days hang. How full and broken a heart becomes when discovering the missing piece has wings! What I long to hold, even but for a moment.

write / light / flight

All day my fingers talk a mean game. One day there will be nothing to compose because It will have passed clean through. Touched. Felt. Believed.

The rain has lasted all day. And I am grateful. For all of it.

 

 

 

 

All This Water

We watched each other in the rain, the hawk and I.

There is a certain infinity to things. No singular glance is merely a passing fact encapsulated in a moment of glass. Nor are we pawns moved about in some colossal game of chess. Every grain of existence is moved by the crests and troughs of a universal sea. To love but not touch. To walk but not fly. To exchange the words tethered to a truth that cannot be wholly given away . . . it matters little because at some place in the ebb and flow of this current, we converge in totality. At some place, we never left. 

The rain gurgles and hums all day, filling frozen depressions with more water than is manageable. Well if it isn't snow, it's rain; my watery core feels compensated. One does tend to think of cresting rollers when joy rides itself this far into shore.

Sparrows startle from under the wheel well. My own giggle and the flutter lifts as I offer my truest apologies for disrupting the hidden meeting. The smell of fish and worms rises from the pavement because that is how Michigan rain smells. I'm surrounded by water and it's a wonder to me why I haven't begun to build the ark. Where is there to go?

All this rain is like the cold curtain of mist and unrelenting showers that fall for three months straight in the highlands of Kenya. There is a sodden story to share – a crafted telling of how the impoverished feeds the starving. She hovers over my shoulder as I wash the dishes, and she watches me bathe. I feel her heartbeat falling into sync mine. Her voice no longer soft and soothing, instead she is now ready to be heard.

Perhaps it is time to go again – to write towards still.

The snow is going.

As am I.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Cleopatra, Judas, and a Woodpecker

pine trees at midnight –
a darkness hiding
what I want

 . . . and books in the bedsheets. It is logistical and comforting to feel words at my fingertips when sleep becomes indented.

With eyes closed, the restriction of “either – or” tassels out to “yes – and.” A slow boat up the Nile from Aswan High Dam kept me physically between the two banks of presence. Yet history can press in and lure one beyond the papyrus sway towards the expansive desert throne of the ancient everything. So, it's like that: a drift between there and here on the way to the Red Sea.

The softest pink ahead of sunrise. Coming out of the woods I could hold the morning moon in the left hand and my Sunday God in the right. I talked it over with Judas and decided that I want the kiss of annihilation.

Predawn air crackles in my chest but returns to freedom as virginal utterance, an ejaculation of unadulterated life. It disappears accordingly but I keep watching because as long as I am alive, I know what comes next.

A woodpecker breaks the glassy silence. I adore his echo and give praise. In me, kneeling before desire is a certain equality – a non-dual union of reverence and correspondence. One must be present to win.

In all of this, I am not heedless. But I am knowing myself in the discovery of the peace that has always been. One must step fully in: to winter, to history, to mistakes, to love, to betrayal, to forgiveness and most of all, into who one is. Goddess of the Nile. A beguiler of Christ. The unbidden monk, tapping out his sermon on the old oak as dawn has her way . . .

 

 

 

 

Choosing the Glass Paperweight

In the bowels of the one hundred year old hospital, each physician's office has a “turkey pen” to be used for the storage of items pertaining to his or her practice. My father's pen was a 5 by 15 foot galley, quite literally walled by chicken wire with a small, roughly hewn door frame as a gate, swinging outward into a narrow pathway. The ceiling is low enough that I have to crouch a little when dodging the expansive grid of heating ducts, pipes and wires. One drab fluorescent light hums and buzzes as it works overtime to show me anything.

Down here, time lumbers ahead only in once-a-year search missions or in maintenance calls. The paper lives of thousands of patients are entombed in the din of boilers and compressors. The embalming incense of archaic equipment and sweating concrete walls invades the nostrils with a slight sting.

It was down here that I spent an entire Saturday sliding banker's boxes of insurance records and doctor visits and overinflated dictation notes from the pen to the hall, the hall to my father's darkening office, and from his office to my grandmother's pole barn on the lake. Mom and I unloaded the orphaned boxes and stacked them in front of lake things. They didn't belong there and they really didn't belong anywhere.

Mom asked if I wanted anything from the forty year old practice, a career that denied me a lifetime of paternal presence. She offered bandages and drug samples and books such as: Topical Fungal Infections; The Color Atlas of Oral Pathology; and Prostrate Health.

I used to make rounds on patients with my father when I was a little girl. All the nurses knew my name and always made a point to tell me how my father saved many lives. He was a rock star of healing and human compassion, sacrificing a major role in the scenes that played out at home so that he could love and be beloved.

Reading the story of Rumi and Shams, I used to easily slide across the centuries to idolize their sacrifice of family and the ordinary for the everlasting mystical legacy of spiritual profoundness. Yet, who did the twin flames leave behind? How did Rumi's family fare while he whirled and turned towards God?

I chose the glass paperweight that kept my father's stacks and charts from disorder and chaos. It sits on my desk, weighing down memories of how it feels to be the lesser choice.

There are many days where I sit alone and write alone and beg and whine and maneuver to be alone so that I can in turn write alone. Maybe one day, a book or a collection of poems that will mean something to a hungry traveler long after I am dead. And, what wordsmith hasn't allowed a few moments of grandeur and ego to sneak into the altruistic, banal need to simply write by imagining the healing impact of her words that saved the world?

Sometimes, my family gingerly knocks on the door. They joke about me emerging from my “hidey-hole.” I leave them behind on long stretches of solitary travel or hotel stays so that I can write. I get frustrated and angry when I can't read or spend time writing. The calling calls and doesn't stop.

Yet, fathers and daughters. Apples and trees. I hate his choices with the power of embodied proof on my side, yet I become the odium I mean to destroy.

There is no one to heal – no impoverished wanderer in need of words, no spiritually lost needing a lighthouse on the pier of time.

There is only the universe inside, expanding itself against a futile, yet holding, gradient of the perceived world.

Foolish thinker, it is not you who longs to meld into pine-scented sky or to rise and play with the birds who attend! It is they who knock on your painstakingly hand-carved wooden door, disregarding the ornate beauty for known promise of home within!

My father is not dead. Maybe there is still a way to forgive his reflection in the soul's ever deepening lake, a way to swim to the bottom of the self to leave it all behind. 

You know not / how you show me / to swim.  

 

 

 

 

 

Wrecked at Sea

Thunder bounces off the frozen river in a halo of rumbles not customary to January. Winter has its watery way with me despite all that must turn to stone. Like the dead buried in her mounds, the river valley holds ashen secrets offered in attrition. I heard the sinner's prayer murmuring in the night wind; it isn't my fault that the syllables get caught up in the ragged branches. This and other lies exposed in the gashes of winter's storm.

My god – the way Chopin waits a little longer to give the notes away! Tonight's hymn lays our dreams discreetly under my pillow. There, there . . . even a moment's sigh in the shape of a yes is enough.

In Springfield,  a voice broke my dreams every night at 3 a.m. for 3 months. On the last day of the 3rd month, I shouted: OKAY! FOR THE LOVE OF . . . oh . . . God.

And the voice said “go.”

In Africa, in the 1st hour of the 1st day and every day following for 1 month straight and many months after, the tears from my eyes ran into my mouth and down the sides my neck. No hearable words tossed their benevolent life raft down from the heavens. No manna fed my children. No burning bush kept us warm.

Yet our prayers were buried in the red earth.  

And the sacred ibis crowned our efforts to survive.
And the colobus welcomed our arrival with the guttural roll of his throat.
And the Kenyans said: we will help you.

The poetry of existence began here.

after Jonah's song
I left God to his fishes –
a faithful servant wrecked at sea