Friday, May 27, 2011

broken to share

two women lean against
an island
explaining contractions
to one who leans against the sink.

each eat their own piece
of chocolate,
broken to share,
and marvel at their flesh.

Not every conversation at the women's retreat was quite as stereotypical as this one, but it really was a beautiful moment.  We all eat our own piece of the same experience, and it is wonderful to learn from those who have experienced things before us. 

Thursday, May 26, 2011

in time it will all make sense


My furry feral fetal fairy-turtle feels fairly free to feed fee-free from fertile fields off Fields Ertel.

It's harder than one would think to write a tongue twister.  That being said, it's kind of sad this little ditty has been my only creative output in a week.  I wrote it in my car after thinking, "Fields Ertel is a weird name."  I actually can say it frighteningly fast.  

Yesterday I started an internship at a very large church and also began a new babysitting gig.  I am still very much trying to figure out how to live into the rhythms of this new season of life.  I have a feeling a lot of it might be hard work, which I am looking forward to.  I read a poet who said when you work, time is moving through you, and when you don't, it's like time is passing by you.  I really identified somehow with that feeling, so I'm looking forward to an intentional time-through-me summer.   

Thursday, May 19, 2011

near


        On Sunday during church while Kenny was worshipping up in front with a banjo, his adorable children kept running up to him throughout the service and whispering in his ear.  Still playing, he bent his body down in order to hear their Children Secrets (anyone who has ever taken care of a child knows about this lovely and often absurd phenomenon).  As I witnessed the sweet scene and thought about their boldness that allowed them to run up in front of everyone without a hint of self-conciousness, it occurred to me that perhaps worship could be like that for all of us.  
        Yes, the Lord is holy, a King who reigns forever in splendor and majesty in the heavenly realms.  But we are not forgotten subjects, trying to shout our songs and supplications loud enough to be heard by some remote kingdom on the outer edges of an unfeeling universe.  We are children of God!  And He is our Father who bends close to us and inclines His ear to all our longings whether lovely, absurd, selfish, or wise.  Kenny’s kids did not run boldly because they earned the right to this intimacy but because they were so confident in their status as beloved children.  Of course, my dad wants to hear what I have to say!  
        In one of those wonderful paradoxes, God invites us to draw near though we can draw no nearer than He already is.  He is closer than our breath, our own skin, our thoughts.  It is our senses that our blind, deaf, numbed to His Presence.  Sometimes I pull my shirt collar up to my forehead and create a tiny little temple inside my shirt.  I close my eyes and whisper a prayer as quietly as I possibly can.  (I am aware I am a little weird, but you should try it!)  I am not sure why, but it scares me a bit to think He can hear me, which might be silly considering I believe He knows every thought or inkling of my heart.  But when I meditate on His closeness and the level of intimacy that He wants to share with me, it's frightening.  And rightfully so; it is all-demanding.  I’m pretty sure it involves dying and not the easy kind.  But it also involves delights that we cannot possibly imagine.  
        So go ahead, run boldly to the Throne of Grace and to the Father of All Compassion.  Maybe, just maybe, He will set down His banjo and put you on His knee, give you a tambourine and let you join in.  All I’m saying is I’ve seen it happen.  

Tuesday, May 17, 2011

tender blue


the man with two tender 
blue eyes, ginger hat, 
metal gun, on a chocolate 
horse named cherry
hung his head inside
a prayer of thanks
for his lower half split
down the middle,
from the middle,
blue legs bent 
and draped,
one for each 
side.
thank you Jesus 
for two.

Fact: It is hard for a mermaid to ride a horse.

Monday, May 16, 2011

tender brown


pants, according to the field 
museum, were invented for horses 
-not actual horses, mind you, 
but their Iranian riders who were invented 
for herding tender cuts of meat
into the gustatory ranch
of a rich man’s mouth,
a tender pocket which was invented 
for appreciating the finer things 
in life.  Someone must do all this
savoring, he thought, lost on cowmen
and horseboys who do not mind cheap 
cigarettes or fumes of tender brown
droppings which God invented 
for the flies to savor 
bask and play in their wavy 
plumes of heat.


The interaction between Evolution/Creation/Invention interest me (biological, sociological, fashionical, etc.): what was made for what?  In a million symbiotic pleasures and relationships, which came first?  For many different things, we will probably never know, but we can choose to have both the mindless enjoyment of a fly and the gratefulness of a human, which is nice.  Appreciation can take different forms.  Wine aged to perfection for 100 years would taste one way to a man dying of thirst and another way to a wine connoisseur.  I think both are important.  

This poem is for Tim’s aunt, who spent a year living on a ranch writing cowboy poetry.  I have no idea what cowboy poetry is, but I hope my life is heading in that direction, so I decided to give it a shot.  “Write about what you know” is one fundamental rule of writing.  “Write about what you have no clue about” should be another.    

Sunday, May 15, 2011

to the politicians

i hate to point out
the obvious, but
you cannot fly
with only one wing.

Wednesday, May 11, 2011

as i am: an easter sermon


I come to you as I am having suffered the suffocating 
silence of our (supposedly) Risen Lord, and yes, I know 
Lent is past and I have tried to orient myself to the green
hope of this Season, to take a maple seed and place it 
lovingly in my palm, to wonder at the tininess that can 
beget a tree, O my people, but today fifteen bruised bodies
later, fifteen years of hysteria, madness, and I am weary
of the psalmist’s joy, his Blessed Assurance that he is
heard. For I have begged, dammit, I have begged to the Air
for broken bodies to rise, to see them graduate and marry 
and raise laughing children, and I have seen them lying
still.  So pray for me, brothers and sisters, and lay me
down softly, carry me spinning in my confusion and in
my grief through this silent sky to a promised land
-ing.  The ground still seems so very, very far away.

This past Sunday one of the leaders at my church gave an Easter Reflection that took my breath away with its honesty.  I felt loved and privileged to hear it, to be entrusted with it.