Poetry - read

  • Admit Something

    Everyone you see, you say to them,

    Love me.

    Of course you do not do this out loud;

    Otherwise,

    Someone would call the cops.

    Still though, think about this,

    This great pull in us

    To connect.

    Why not become the one

    Who lives with a full moon in each eye

    That is always saying,

    With that sweet moon language,

    What every other eye in this world

    Is dying to hear.

  • There is no controlling life.

    Try corralling a lightning bolt,

    containing a tornado. Dam a

    stream and it will create a new

    channel. Resist, and the tide

    will sweep you off your feet.

    Allow, and grace will carry

    you to higher ground. The only

    safety lies in letting it all in –

    the wild and the weak; fear,

    fantasies, failures and success.

    When loss rips off the doors of

    the heart, or sadness veils your

    vision with despair, practice

    becomes simply bearing the truth.

    In the choice to let go of your

    known way of being, the whole

    world is revealed to your new eyes.

  • On the day when

    the weight deadens

    on your shoulders

    and you stumble,

    may the clay dance

    to balance you.

    And when your eyes

    freeze behind

    the grey window

    and the ghost of loss

    gets into you,

    may a flock of colours,

    indigo, red, green

    and azure blue,

    come to awaken in you

    a meadow of delight.

    When the canvas frays

    in the currach of thought

    and a stain of ocean

    blackens beneath you,

    may there come across the waters

    a path of yellow moonlight

    to bring you safely home.

    May the nourishment of the earth be yours,

    may the clarity of light be yours,

    may the fluency of the ocean be yours,

    may the protection of the ancestors be yours.

    And so may a slow

    wind work these words

    of love around you,

    an invisible cloak

    to mind your life.

  • Look, the trees

    are turning

    their own bodies

    into pillars

    of light,

    are giving off the rich

    fragrance of cinnamon

    and fulfillment,

    the long tapers

    of cattails

    are bursting and floating away over

    the blue shoulders

    of the ponds,

    and every pond,

    no matter what its

    name is, is

    nameless now.

    Every year

    everything

    I have ever learned

    in my lifetime

    leads back to this: the fires

    and the black river of loss

    whose other side

    is salvation,

    whose meaning

    none of us will ever know.

    To live in this world

    you must be able

    to do three things:

    to love what is mortal;

    to hold it

    against your bones knowing

    your own life depends on it;

    and, when the time comes to let it go,

    to let it go.

  • Before you know what kindness really is

    you must lose things,

    feel the future dissolve in a moment

    like salt in a weakened broth.

    What you held in your hand,

    what you counted and carefully saved,

    all this must go so you know

    how desolate the landscape can be

    between the regions of kindness.

    How you ride and ride

    thinking the bus will never stop,

    the passengers eating maize and chicken

    will stare out the window forever.

    Before you learn the tender gravity of kindness,

    you must travel where the Indian in a white poncho

    lies dead by the side of the road.

    You must see how this could be you,

    how he too was someone

    who journeyed through the night

    with plans and the simple breath

    that kept him alive.

    Before you know kindness

    as the deepest thing inside,

    you must know sorrow

    as the other deepest thing.

    You must wake up with sorrow.

    You must speak to it till your voice

    catches the thread of all sorrows

    and you see the size of the cloth.

    Then it is only kindness

    that makes sense anymore,

    only kindness that ties your shoes

    and sends you out into the day

    to mail letters and purchase bread,

    only kindness that raises its head

    from the crowd of the world to say

    it is I you have been looking for,

    and then goes with you every where

    like a shadow or a friend.

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