Sunday, March 3, 2013
1:00pm
21˚F
Our body is
something like our second cave. Our soul enters it at birth, blind in its
choosing, to escape the shatter and rain of our first wombcave. We rush into it
without hesitation, without fear of what is inside, of what will be waiting for
us. It is dark and damp and the walls are thin at first, but as our soul grows
our cave grows and the two become inseparable. They move together, our soul the
light, our cave the dark. And when pain drains into our soul, when its watery
hand grabs at our light, our cave shakes and drips, howls until the rain
breaks. But in death our soul has no choice but to be carried off on the moist
limb of a flood, to be separated from our cavebody, to be on its own for the
first time in deep water.
"I wanted / to sing to you"
This fifth
Sunday is the first time that my body and my soul visit my uncle. They have been
traveling together for twenty-three years and are still weary of the rain. I
sit under an eastern pine next to his grave and stare at the cooper tinsel
stone that weighs on his body like pain, grief, or guilt weighs on the chest,
until I think I can see it fall in. Until I think I can see the ground separate.
Until I think I can see his cavebody rise up into the blue bowl, into the grand
sky where it belongs, where I hope its soul is waiting.
"go home"
The snow is
leaving today. I can smell the pungent green of the pines waving goodbye. In
the wake of the white, I can taste remnants of spring. They are sweet but stark
and bitter in my mouth like the way blueberries taste when they are not quite
ready. I toss these fragments of spring around my tongue to remember them in
case winter comes back. The air seems thinner and lighter as it tries to push
through me as if it has shed its coat for the first time in a long winter.
Deep down I
know that my uncle is not here. I know that I am praying and mourning over a
soulless body, but maybe I am wrong. Maybe he is here with me, but not in the
way I think, not in the body that lays dormant under me. Maybe his soul is next
to me, watching over his cavebody. Maybe he is afraid to leave it here in this
cemetery with all these other hollow caves, but I do not hope for that.
What I hope
for his soul, for all the souls, is that they have already gone, that they have
decided to give their caves to the leaves. That they have entrusted their
second dwellings to the pines, to the sky, to the mallard ducks, to all the
living that need shelter from the rain. What I hope for these souls is
something only nature can give; only nature can offer the protection needed for
souls to move on.
"i am waiting for you there"
As I walk away
from what I hope is an empty cave, I can hear the mallard ducks calling after me.
I imagine they know I worry about my uncle’s soul and how his body is surviving
without its light. I imagine they spoke to him before he left and told him not
to worry, told him that his second dwelling was safe. Although I still feel the
sharpness of loss, I know the sky has nothing to be sad about today as she
stares down from her own blue cave with all those souls lightly flickering
inside of her.
_______________________________________________________________
Our Souls, Our Caves--Blog Entry # 5 Inspired By:
“dying”
by Lucille Clifton
i saw a small moon rise
from the breast of a woman
lying in a hospital hall
and I saw that the moon was
me
and I saw that the punctured
bag
of a woman body was me
and i saw you sad there in
the lobby
waiting to visit and I
wanted
to sing to you
go home
i am waiting for you there



Marguerite
ReplyDeleteI actually read this blog aloud to myself so that I could hear the poetry in it even better! Your prose always sounds like poetry to me anyhow and I wanted the words to resonate with their full weight as I accompanied you to the cemetary once more with the trees and the mallards and the big questions you are asking about body and soul! Beautiful writing as always!
Yes, Marguerite. Your language and content do a good job of mingling poetry and prose. Like other weeks, I enjoyed how the poem by Clifton influenced the thoughts of your blog. Each week there is a clear voice to this mix of prose, poetry, and meditation.
ReplyDeleteThis is a beautiful meditation on what happens after life, and what place nature has in that happening. I love your description of the shifting season: "I can smell the pungent green of the pines waving goodbye. In the wake of the white, I can taste remnants of spring." ...and the way you want to hold on to that taste, in case winter comes back.
ReplyDeleteYour reflections on your uncle are bittersweet. I can feel the loss and also your hope that he's found peace with the pines, the sky and the ducks. Again, I think choosing to blog from the cemetery was an inspired idea.
Others have mentioned your language. I can only echo what they say. Your sentences are very poetic and a strong sense of you comes through the writing.
I am again, always, struck by how vividly you evoke the borderlands in your entries, between the real and the imagined, the lyrical and concrete. Even your reflections here consider fully the blurriness between the present and the past. We're getting to know a place that is almost dreamlike in how you've evoked it.
ReplyDeleteAs an aside, I guess I should have figured this, based on your athletics, but I read this and thought, "Wait. She's only twenty-three??" Your voice suggests you are wise beyond your years :-)