There is a lot that I don’t talk about on this
blog, as I am very conscious of respecting the privacy of those around me. So I
will keep this brief. There was a sudden and tragic death of a young man in my
family this week, and we are all reeling from it. I am shocked and saddened and
very concerned for those who were closest to him. I’m unable to concentrate
well enough to write anything at all today. So I will simply leave you with
some poems, and a plea to hold your loved ones close.
Four Bowls
by Kristen
McHenry
You buy four bowls and a silver robe the same
day the dog gets his teeth pulled. Something about the bowls, the robe, and the
missing teeth all go together but you can’t seem to parse it out. “A leaf is a
kingdom of fervid veins” is the only thought that sticks. You’ve thought this
before but would never say it out loud. A leaf is not a metaphor, a leaf is not
a body made of light. You’ve been told by serious people it’s a factual item,
specific and concrete. It doesn’t do to always think of things as other things.
You are stern with yourself about this, you promise yourself, next time, but
then you’re surprised by a blue jay and it’s something about the fleeting
nature of genius and breaking with routine, and also, nobility and the urge to
paint a tree. Oh, no no, the serious ones shake their heads and waggle their
lovely long fingers, fingers that spend all day running up and down crisp lacy
lists or columns of numbers, cool marble fingers meant for holding pencils and
pointers and ball point pens, but never pens with funny little pom-pom toppers
or holograms of nudes, just the purely functional ones, and you are jealous of
their ability to see each thing in its precise measurements, and you miss their
beautiful waggling fingers when they go off write to another list. You haven’t
forgotten about the leaf, and the serious ones would benefit from hearing that
a leaf is a long, fine song, an infinity cycle, but in the end you decide for
some, such knowledge is upending, for some, it’s best to know a leaf only and
exactly as a leaf, a thin, flattened structure borne above ground and designed
for photosynthesis.
Teaching Peaches
by Kristen
McHenry
I dreamed
I taught a workshop
on how to eat a peach,
despite what little
I know
of peaches, what little I know
of bright and sweet.
Still, I dished them out
fat slices.
You have to go
slow to really know it,
I said with all sincerity.
I ate the pit before they noticed it.
I wanted them
to comprehend
only the lavish, the most
abundant slice.
On Emptiness
by Kristen
McHenry
When I stick my hands in there to feel around
there’s nothing. Once I sat for emptiness alone, entire months, flailing
blindly in the spaces where emptiness had weight. Nothing rolls off of my
palms, nothing mocks my efforts. I’m parched and have received bad information.
All that time I sat, breathing in, only to know my own low feelings. To kneel
there open-handed and say, this is all I have to offer. My palms no longer
ferry light.
They say within a void lies all possibilities,
but I think there are only two persuasions: Corpulent emptiness, and a
nothingness that drifts above our heads, that will not acknowledge us. In
second grade we planted seedlings. They came up vivid, lusty shoots. I
understood then there was a kind of order, that this was nature’s outcome. It
was impersonal and pleasing. Could I now proclaim, I am feeling full, or I must
fill up, or, I am fully felt. I flounder with seeds and window boxes. The
problem is that emptiness has teeth, and wishes of its own. The emptiness is
un-content. It will not do with the least it can survive on. No stones, no
feathers, no shells settle in my hands. Only a crusted thing, grown around its
nut, seed of all nourishment, jewel of the essential.
Sit and think of nothing. Sit and engage only in
the hollowness of breath, its motion in your veins. I tell people all day long
because I believe it is important: We breathe in oxygen, we breathe out carbon
dioxide, the lungs lunge, the lungs do their job. There is nothing easy in the
effortless.
I remain to this day faithless despite
everything I knew my heart could do. I stick my hands in there to feel around.
I bring up tangled in my fingers a clear and weightless substance that slips
off into space.
--Kristen McHenry
2 comments:
Brilliant writing, Kristen. Sheer brilliant writing!
Patrick
*blush* Thank you, John!
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