Dancing
With Joy
You
stomp into the room and all eyes turn
in
your direction.
You
wear mismatched socks and a hat that
bounces
with baubles as you dip into a
curtsey
for the crowd, your boots caked
with
mud and flowers twisted through the
holes
where the laces normally go.
The
murmurs start as you take off your
coat
and reveal a tutu the colour of the
sun
and your smile melts even the toughest
coat
of armour standing in the corner.
As
the music begins you saunter into the
middle
of the floor and pirouette into a
spinning
spiral of light and your giggles
erupt
into a waterfall of laughter that soon
has
the captivated audience clapping and
joining
in.
With
your bright red lipstick and comical
moves,
some see you as a fool. But you
know
better. You know that it is okay to be
looked
at as the silly one if it brings joy to
another.
You who knows you don't have to
look
for the light because you are the light.
You
who has learned to dance with joy
instead
of sorrow.
Tending to Sorrow
Sorrow enters silently in
the middle
of the night on the
smouldering tail of
a shooting star.
It lifts the sheets so
gently I feel
nothing as I wrap my arms
around
this strange bedfellow and
drift back
into a murky slumber, eyes
moist
with unshed tears.
I wake early, wobbly,
uncertain,
shaking the sleep still
clinging to
my dreams. The sun slants in
odd
angles across the floor.
Rising, I scratch the scars
from
wounds that still linger
like ghosts
tend to do and I begin to
sing a
lullaby.
A lullaby that touches the
longings
that sorrow has left cupped
in my
hands where quietly they
turn into
prayer.
Illusions of Childhood
We
all had a conception of how our childhood
should
have been. We took notes and watched
each
other out of the corner of our eyes and
coveted
what we did not have.
When
we started going to parties we drank,
untangled
chains of smoke, painted on our
smiles
and wrapped our arms around the lies
that
bore the truth found in alcohol.
We
were fuelled by our needs and desires as we
danced
around the secrets and picked on the
wallflowers
for not indulging in our fantasies.
We
could tell by looking into the eyes of the
stoners
that they were elsewhere, besotted
with
their own thoughts as we changed
partners
under crossed stars.
We
played dress up and masqueraded as
muses,
all trying to out run the bad things
that
cannot be explained.
We
twisted our way through the crowd,
collecting
slivers of conversations and
memories
and stowed them away in our
pockets.
We
strung them together and created the
childhoods
we believed we wanted all
those
years ago and wore them like badges
of
courage.
Before
the night was put to bed, we drank
a
toast to our lost innocence and slept, our
cheeks
dusted with each others tears and
illusions.
The Initiate
It
was the grandmothers who taught her
to
follow the rivers, to dip the oars deeply
to
stir still waters and to touch the reflection
of
the stars on quiet ponds.
They
taught her to rattle words, sprinkle
sugar
on the dead, to howl with the winds,
drink
from the big dipper and sing lullabies
to
the moon.
As
an initiate she built little altars and
cast
her nets wide. She scryed for answers
in
the wishing wells and watched the rocky
paths
split mountains in half.
She
learned of remedies in plants, the power
of
prayer, the truth in the fire and how to
part
the veils. From generation to generation,
a
gift was passed.
Now
they are a dying breed. Their language
and
healing only heard by a few. Who will stand
stand
for them when all that remains of their
knowledge is left in the rattle of their bones?
The Curandera: Walking Between Two Worlds
She
wakes before the night sky has shifted colours
and
steps into the desert. Walking with a rhythm
born
of women she stops to listen to the song that
comes
with the rising sun.
With
her hair flying like black ravens behind her
she
hurries to collect the bones of javelinas and
the
shed skin of snakes.
Inside
she gathers tea leaves and sugar and grinds
them
together with truth and the sorrow of bitter
herbs,
making a potion for the lost ones who come
to
her door.
As
dusk settles, she lights the candles, rattles the
bones
of her mother and rubs her fingers across
the
milagros, their secrets burning in her blood.
She
tosses the petals of marigolds and kernels of
corn
into the fire and onto the desert floor, offering
thanks
to her teachers.
In
the hours between the coyotes and the moon she
listens
when the wind shifts, carrying omens of change.
As
she slumbers she learns to dream of the highway
as a river and herself as a vessel to carry the stories.
Five out of FIVE STARS...Tripping over myself to begin at beginning again 3x - Joyz
ReplyDeleteI love the imagery and flow of these poems Karen. Gary Grossman
ReplyDeleteYou are gifted. Beautifully written.
ReplyDelete