Because we live in the browning season
the heavy air blocked our breath,
and in this time when living
is only survival, we doubt the voices
that come shadowed on the air,
certain thoughts, a motion that is soft,
imperceptible, a twilight rain
soft feather’s fall, a small body
dropping into its nest, rustling, murmuring,
settling in for the night.
Because we live in the hard-edged season,
where plastic brittle and gleaming shines
and in this space that is cornered and angled,
we do not notice wet, moist, the significant
drops falling in perfect spheres
that are the certain measures of our minds;
almost invisible, those tears,
soft as dew, fragile, that cling to leaves,
petals, roots, gentle and sure,
every morning.
We are the women of daylight; of clocks and steel
foundries, of drugstores, and streetlights,
of superhighways that slice our days in two.
Wrapped around in glass and steel we ride
our lives; behind dark glasses we hide our eyes,
our thoughts, shaded, seem obscure, smoke
fills our minds, whiskey husks our songs,
polyester cuts our bodies from our breath,
our feet from the welcoming stones of earth.
Our dreams are pale memories of ourselves,
and nagging doubt is the false measure of our day.
Even so, the spirit voices are singing,
their thoughts are dancing in the dirty air.
Their feet touch the cement, the asphalt
delighting, still they weave dreams upon our
shadowed skulls, if we could listen.
If we could hear.
Let’s go then. Let’s find them. Let’s
listen for the water, the careful gleaming drops
that glisten on the leaves, the flowers. Let’s
ride the midnight, the early dawn. Feel the wind
striding through our hair. Let’s dance
the dance of feathers, the dance of birds.
(Spirituality, quote: Paula Gunn Allen, 'KOPIS’TAYA-- a Gathering of Spirits')
Comments