Saturday, June 25, 2022

Please don't ask






     “I believe that if one fathoms deeply

      one’s own neighborhood and the everyday

      world in which he lives, the greatest of worlds

      will be revealed.”


                         —Masanobu Fukuoka

                             “ The One Straw Revolution”



**



The moon, 

against the blue,

ghost-brushed half 

high to the south.


Hard-pack turning to dust. 

Pearly-everlasting, buckeye.  


And those petals, tiny purple, aside the trail, 

asking for a name 

for them to try. 



**



Breathing. Quiet still-points

over clean spread pages.


Morning’s light taking pen’s black 

to crisp blue lines.




**



—“November 3rd”


Sitting in my room,

naming our favorite pieces, 

hers the cut-paper figure

leaning into the winds.


I speak of Miyazawa,

his work, inspiration, read aloud

this poem so important for me


and wonder 

what else I’ve not shared 

over the years.



**



Late May


Light follows us now, 

lingers evenings longer,

waits for us in mornings,

our eyes opening with it there,

doing its business, leaving us to ours

—leaving us, mornings like this, 

like naked, exposed—no pressure,

no suggestions on its part, 

of anything other than

that which may come to us

at times like this, when so very much 

may well be allowed.



**



a muffled bump

from the kitchen

reminds me—love,

at times, neither heard,

nor spoken



**



I get to see 


this grey morning,

this woodpecker, 


before he starts his work,

as he hops the long arm of the pine


and is gone. 



**



“First let us together turn into zillions

     of glittering particles in the cosmos and scatter

        into the directionless sky”

                                           —Kenji Miyazawa

                                  


A poem to Maxine


so, if we are of atoms, atoms,

then we’re never just one, we’re never alone,

it’s the space in-between

that allows   us


if we are atoms, we’re forever together,

it’s the space in between that attracts us,


if we’re atoms


mother to father to child-daughter 

to sister to friend—always friends


it’s the space in-between that allows


learner to teacher, friend to lover to wife 

to husband to mother to children


to grandmother loving

and always soft-spoken friend


all the whiles, the before’s, all the afters,

always the space that allows—


if we are of atoms, then touch knows no bounds

and smiles share substance with tears,


if we are atoms, our skin dreams of ashes, 

our absence sings songs 

of what’s very much 

here


where we’re never just one, but always together 

in the whole of the space that allows,


in the zillions of particles that glitter forever

in the home of our very own skies



**



The west facing point of my neighbor’s rooftop

that overlooks the valley and opposing hillsides

is a particular favorite of local mocking birds,

who perch, dance and sing there, day after day.


I have to remember to thank my neighbor too.



**


One hundred years ago this year

Kenji Miyazawa began writing the first of multiple

volumes of poems I sit reading today.


In less than one hundred years from now,

the snow pack in mountain ranges that run

the length of western North America will be gone.



**



         “To know is to get lost.”


                           —Nanao Sakaki



**



Thinking, in the quiet—then rain,

dropping, on the roof, in pools

on wooden decking, freely dropping, 

boundless dropping, washing 

thinking away…



**



Translucent—the leaves

of the maple glow in themselves

in sunlight.




**



In the vase on the altar,

the bending yellow rose,

doing its part.



**



Deep in walking-thought,

when buckeye blossoms,


topping distant trees, reach in,

pull me out, to meet.



**



Windows pulled open all night

now hold court in the quiet perfection

of morning simply arrived, silent presence

something to widen into, along with 

all else widening here too.



**



Well before the sun finds its place

in the sky, light lets us know it’s coming.


Cold air or warm, it’s shadow 

that announces its arrival.


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