Sunday, June 30, 2013

Wink in Time



Good company.

How I love music
That moves the tears in my heart
To my eyes!

I couldn’t do that if I tried!

And that is why 
I believe in the truth of feeling
Above the power to reason my way.

I wish I could cry every day--
And map the course of my tears
So when I feel lost
I could find my way clear,
To get back to my soul--

To that breakaway moment of unity,
Of certainty, whole.

I feel the edge of myself now
Like a curtain of light--
Satori is not so far away, 
Just a wink of that self-in-time--

I am, and you are, divine!

I want the company of those
Who stir up the river of tears I’ve stored
To flow and flood down all the years 
Unto the bliss
Of always.

© Gerry Sackett, 2013


Curtain of Light ~ Aurora over Haja
Photo by Frank Olsen, from Wikimedia Commons



Tuesday, June 25, 2013

They Hate


They hate holy laziness,
Salubrious sloth, ecstatically
Motiveless frenzy.
They hate beautiful strangeness,
Undogmatic freedom,
Delicate strength,
Nervousness transformed into courage,
Impossibly hidden music,
Inexplicable unslavish unlabeled sweetness.
Maybe they hate the animal
That is exquisitely least 
And most animalistic.
They hate a casually outrageous survivor
Who survives tactfully without trying.
They hate a chimera who is paradoxically pure,
An animal that is all animals, all elements--
Earth, air, fire, water, rodent, snake, bird, flower.
They hate hypnotically unpredictable love.
They hate dignity that is not obsessive.
They hate unkillable wonder
That is supposedly commonplace.
They hate an animal who owns
Both porphyry palace and alley of ordure,
Unfazed by either.
They hate the being that floats like a wafted petal,
Or that decides to be curvaceously steadfast as a rock,
Or that decides to sparkle or become utter shadow.
They hate this finally benign dependable voyeur.
They hate the hugeness of its gemlike gaze,
Or when it makes Buddha-eyes--wise, calm, half-closed.
They hate to be judged, but theirs is the judgment.
They hate the intimacy of its mythic aloofness,
Not knowing the politeness of its deep charm.
They hate this elegant peace,
Even more elegant speed.
They hate this reality.
They hate this metamorphosing surreality,
Regal silliness,
Suave magic.
They hate cats.
It is wrong to hate cats.
They don’t know how to interpret.
They don’t know how to touch.
It is wrong to hate cats.
They hate cats.

© Stephen Margulies, 2013


Kuniyoshi Utagawa, "Okabe," c. 1844
Image from Wikimedia Commons
A cat at a temple could be a witch in cat form, as shown here.
There were those who despised cats because they were said
to be the only animal not to weep when the Buddha died.


Saturday, June 15, 2013

The Old Man Wakes up Early


Coming suddenly awake before dawn,
he gets up, mouth dry as ashes.
He eases to the kitchen,
dippers water down his throat and splashes his face
before he feels the coolness blowing in.

From the porch he watches the stars–
like his mother’s colander turned upside-down–
but in his bones he feels the front stirring.
By nightfall it’ll be here
and maybe his corn will make.
Two years out of five you lose it all,
his father had said, and break even the others.

He steps off into wet grass and through trees
with antique names–Smokehouse, Albemarle Pippin,
Sops of Wine–his grandfather’s favorites:
remembering his mother’s caution
about dew sores on bare feet;

how he learned to break in new shoes
by walking in dew till they were soaked,
then drying them on his feet,
and the baseball glove he’d wet with dew
and tie up with a ball in it to shape the pocket;
a hayfield glittering in morning light–
silver beads sliding down a rusty wire.

He looks down at his skinny feet
and long, bony toes splayed on the damp earth
in the moonlight, pale as clover roots.

Slowly digs them in till they disappear.
Feels himself start to grow again.

© David Black, 2011

"Barefoot"
Photo by Lorenz Kerscher
from Wikimedia Commons

Monday, June 10, 2013

Passage


In colluvial dreams 
we poke at the edges
of the thin membrane that separates
us from God
as though there is a weak point
that we might pass through

The back and forth of the whip-poor-wills 
ping-pongs through the canyon
and the wind plays the walnut leaves like a xylophone

Somewhere beyond our limits a bobcat cries 
and the rain begins to fall in large drops 
that seem to rest on the rocks forever

In the narrow floodplain, a deer exhales
as the sun pushes its light over the low ridges

Once again the night turns us over to the day and we rise,
slowly, toward morning
                     
                          Smoke Hole Canyon, 7/7/2011

© Jeff DeBellis, 2013

South Branch, Potomac River
Smoke Hole Canyon, West Virginia
Photo by Jarek Tuszynski, Wikimedia Commons

Monday, June 3, 2013

Today


Today, I acknowledge my true self,
    accepting myself just as I am now;
Today, I welcome this day with a 
    warm heart and open arms;
Today, I let the presence within me
    bless the presence within others and
    the presence within others bless me;
Today, I take time to smell the roses, look
    at the sky, and listen to the birds sing;
Today, I surrender fully to the Cosmic 
    Power that is in everything;
Today, I am a new person doing a new 
    thing, something beautiful and eternal;
Today, the only business on my agenda
     is today's business;
Today, I am free, happy, and at peace
     with God, myself, and all creation.

    © Uriah J. Fields, 2013

Time to Look at the Sky
Photo by Tony Russell