
Courtesy of Tjflex2/Flickr (CC BY-NC-ND 2.0).
These lines might declare
that I no longer fear it, but I boast
like one who wields
new weapons—
all bravado, flourish, and strut—
while inside I’m gripped
with recoil, knocked back
by pushback of any kind.
Or maybe I’m too tired
to drag this plough
any deeper into shadow, maybe
I want to rest. Maybe
I want to weave even darkness
into soft, heavy blankets
with which to build a nest. Colder
the winds that blow now,
closer to the bone. Crow’s feet.
Lost teeth. Slipping
memories, one by one. Diagnoses
and crises of every type
and a diminishing
capacity for sleep
and still I must admit
that honey seems
even more honeyed, now,
the sun shining
toward my slippered feet—
golden as clarified butter.
Ghee, sun, a mother’s love.
This day is an amber
I’d happily be petrified
within, ancient light granting
warmth and clarity
to dwindling days. Shadows
cast by leaves
flicker and drift across my floor
to remind me of doors
opening and clicking shut
at once, all the places
we must enter or exit
with love. Honeycomb me,
catacomb me, seed me
back into earth
when its my turn,
having drawn from me first
each fault
& imperfection, leaving
only bright fire
burning, & sweetness.
I’ll wait where the wind
nudges seed
from a dead pod,
where the night
spins in dervishes
the sand that will blanket it.
One day maybe I’ll snap
as easily
onto a breeze, homebound
by parachute, propeller, or wing.