Saturday, August 22, 2020

Doubling down...

  —Doubling down



“I have no philosophy: I have senses.”


                           —Alberto Caeiro






Emily Dickenson

tells us, “by slant,” of possibility,

tells us her way, without telling us ours.




**



It’s the weight and heft,

the mass of earth

these hills present

to ocean-born droplets

that gives rise to fogs

that billow the ridge

we watch day-to-day,

we earth-born,  

in the time we have, 

adding our own 

wetted words.



**



in company with the world about us,

of the world we are about, sustains myriads

of particulars giving way inexhaustibly to more


name upon name calls out through us its sound


    “In an instant all my doubts

     and the gloomy mist

     of my confusion

     vanished.” *


owning nothing, owned by nothing, year-long

days open un-tread ways, and we care

to try


and it occurs to me with morning

how carefully I attend the words of a man

who tells me he knows nothing


how we guess our course to catch no more

and no less than 


movement


and with movement, the way of the world, 

we learn to figure our own arrogance


which world takes for granted

and moves us along

just that way

anyway



**



Unable to capture the sun’s revolution,

unable to count the beats of my heart, 


how foolish to think I can plan 

much more beyond 


where I tentatively stand—it’s my feet 

that will find what’s best from here.



**



The road-work guys rattle late morning air 

with signals of ongoing repair, subtly, steadily

accentuating my inability to negotiate the distance

to the kitchen, without stopping to bow to the pain, 

deepening lessons of pandemic isolation, conditions

accrued over years, demanding attention, now, here.



**



—After Mikret Kebede


This poem,


     “It acts out of the act of silence.”


words are acts of silence, rising out, returning to

the never-diminished well of the welling-up

of itself of words


intuition-lifted learning articulating presence


not quiet


each resonant sound returning

its silence


—song hints at this, literacy affirms it



**



Meanderings while on pain meds


—Life’s Deliverables


Birth. Pain. Death. 


Three lights. Birth-Pain-Death-birth-pain-death-birth-pain…..living/dying


threads of dynamic, ever-changing fabric-flow of earth-existence-in-cosmos, 

a wall-less all —three lights of myriads, named lights—name too, your own


fabric-flow energies charging life’s deliverables, as we live them


over fifty years since I cleared out my father’s dresser—t-shirts, under-ware, 

socks, matches and condoms—condoms? Dad? only forty-eight, 


his eldest grandson’s age, 

Mom younger, 

sure


how vivid these things so close to him became then, how real to me, only 

in his absence—a handful of his tools, still at my work bench,

still coming to my hands


as with the knick-knacks on Uncle’s mantle, became so curious—once invisible,

becoming so personal to him, his, but only when he’d gone


life’s deliverables, so readily ignored, until not


high mountains consistently call—the weight, the work, the legs—everything carried 

is all you have—when tired rest, hungry cook, make due—bed, shelter, sleep


conditions at hand, as delivered, determine, tell, direct, restore—the immediate, 

the intimate--forest, rock, dust, lake, stream, stars—all the breathing


doubled over on the floor to relieve the pain, running a finger 

along the dusty shelf, thinking how much in our home 

I’ve ignored so long


unavoidable pain, unexpected gift—immediacy, light, clarity 


aging skeletal and muscular ecology beginning to stress, weaken—deterioration

and herniated discs can equal unimaginable pain 


lightening-bolt illumination, flicking threads, flash opening into its own letting go


in the midst of which I wonder aloud, how can others, who live with this, daily, 

how  they do that—threads realized 


at seventy-seven continuing to pretend to add yet another ten—birth opens 

life’s process of dying into the new, into new—no death, no life

 

threads that flow the forms that friction the stitch unfold the light 

that enables our seeing what we don’t see


for our failure to attend our living-dying


doubling down in covid, bowing to the unimaginable, the loss, the turmoil, 

the challenge around us, the glow of threads and links, tails of collective truths, 

of our living-into-dying, and the dust-covered joys just lying in wait 

at our finger tips




  From Cid Corman


          With so much

          personal

          sorrow,


          how take on

          the world? Clear.

          Bow, be-


          side me. Must

          as we will,

          share it.


Sunday, August 2, 2020

The next move...is morning's




Relationship true to the teacher never severs,
is never dormant nor forgotten; 

even in sleep it rises, light-shown  
shadows remembered.


**


“As a poet and contemplative” is the way the author speaks
of Merton, saying

Merton’s lived life was in essence the crux of his “dialogue”
with Eastern traditions,

the conversation of spirit he valued so; yet, says the author,
he neglected to formulate, didn’t bother to frame
“a systematic structure” 

for this “intellectual and existential 
spiritual journey,”

which to me means Merton’s natural inclinations 
moved through him, moving him through
the world listening deeply— 

structure-less, open, kind, caring.


**


The Ohlone peoples see Hummingbird
as the primary purveyor of unrestrained life-spirit,

unapologetically riding its own pointing desires
wherever led, no illusions of longevity;

each touch telling its own fullness,
each leveraged wing springing wide the next, 

questions of self, or of other, 
simply not keeping up.


**


—to David S.

After so many years of distracted attentions,
of inattentions, of demands for immediacy 
I accuse so many others of, 

I turn in your pages 

slow as a dusted arc of trail that slants a canyon’s edge
to roll that open taking-in of silence’s quiet entry, 

so sudden as to startle recognition of kin, of kinship 
so certain as to pause every question before 
any fumblings at the lips.


**


Injured hip, old hip, ligaments perhaps—all
likely yes—if not heat, maybe ice—and the wife
complains too, of some stubborn old man, 
and I say what he says, that everyone’s stubborn 
time to time—I mean, he said, look
at sunlight’s insistence 

at the shade-covered windows.


**


Sun’s light unfolds through the window, over the desk, 
down along the floor and climbs to quiet rest on the leg, 
on the hand with the pen, on the papers there—
the warm-glow touch of knowing morning.


**

I’m here, so I speak, I write—they said,
and so say I—what is poetry, what the poem, if not 
the gleam and recognition in the working of words 
in tongues given, what we freely reap there.


**


Sunlight dapples the window.
Diamond shaped layers of dust-glow, 
shadowed forms of trellis-caught light

that allow petals and leaves along the fence
venue enough, distance enough 

to quiver under the strokes 
of passing breezes.

Even the sound of a workman’s hammer-fall,
restrained.


**


The sun reaches in to play
with the white page, blue lines.

Shifting halos illumine whispered secrets,
the glow of softly held wrinkles

giving way before the advancing edge
of silencing shadow,

the surface face, crisp and sharp 
delineations, hovering,

the almost indiscernible marks
of deeper inclinations

at work.


**


It occurred to me the other day
at the keyboard, at an email, 
that I’d written really a letter,
an intimate telling to another

that I’d initially taken to have been prompted 
by longing for connections somehow gone, 
missing in the all-consuming isolation, of late,
of solitary heart beats, 

only to recognize now, 
it’s the resonant pull of shared strands
that allows the heart to allow the fingers 
to speak.

I may well write for myself, 
but sure and real telling is always told
to others, there hearing.


**


After all these years
and all the ways of knowing you,
the words still can’t catch up.


**


Fog lies along the ridge-line in layers 
thick to thin, east to west, to disappear 
behind slopes of grass and scrub—

wind-rushed limbs and wisps waving 
in space held distant quiet 

by smudge-discovered windows,

seemingly not there, yet somehow between,
yet still within reach 
pulled close 

through words.


**


—Where I go, when gone…

The first light to break free from beneath the east
stretches a sighed touch so fair 

as to almost be breath making claim 
by simple presence,

the slopes signaling response with a silent cough 
of marbled clouds

just above their offering 
of woven trails.

In the Sierra, these thousand-foot hills
wouldn’t merit measure, 

but here at the edge of the bay, 
are mountain,

freedom at the door, calling 
anyone willing to wake, 

to turn an ear, 
to step.



**
**


—From Cid Corman

    “With so much
     personal
     sorrow,

     how take on
     the world? Clear.
     Bow, be-

     side me. Must,
     as we will,
     share it.”