Forgetting My Name
On mornings in July
when the wind whispers
cool on my skin
I give myself permission
to forget my name.
What good is a name—
first or last—
when a body
and a heart full of words
is enough to identify
the soul’s place
in the spaces between
the petals of flowers
or planted firmly in the sun
with the lapping of waves
hungry at the shore
of some small ocean
of unspoken sound?
There are no mountain meadows here
or inconvenient reversals of roles
between mothers
and the naming of children
who cannot survive.
Instead, let me remember
that there once was a man
who knew my real name
and he called to me
with the clear voice of birds
before light and morning—
before the waking of the world.
I have spent so many sunrises
trying to find his face
in the depths of the dark forests
but I am always left alone to listen
and to forget my name
again and again.
For now call me flesh.
Call me blood
thick with human scent.
Touch the letters of my lips
and the outline of my eyes.
Examine each curved toe
for evidence of my rich female heritage
and the sound of my name
forgotten over and over again
in every language on Earth.
You will know nothing of me
unless you listen to the doves
at dawn.
Wednesday, July 15, 2009
Tuesday, July 14, 2009
The Light That Fills The Ocean
Your light fills the ocean
where I live. –Rumi
Whether we give ourselves or not
there is no compromise
in the rising tide
that defends the nature
of the stolen soul.
The handful of daisies plucked
from the edge of the neighbor’s field
does not wilt knowing they will never
see the sun again.
The falling star does not stall
to watch the flicker of fireflies
or wait for the delayed wish
of the woman unsure of how much
she can afford to give away to the night.
Walk the shores hopefully
and cast your body onto the rocks
at risk of losing the life you are living
if it might yield one night of pleasure.
If we give ourselves, or not,
the heart will never forgive
for the opportunity lost
to invite happiness, the most weary guest,
into the light of the warm hearth and give her a place to rest
until she can move on with new strength
toward the heavy doors of eternity.
From this place of salty mist
and sand between your toes
breathe deeply
have courage
and make space
for the ocean of light
that is about to arrive
as the tide is commanded to do.
Your light fills the ocean
where I live. –Rumi
Whether we give ourselves or not
there is no compromise
in the rising tide
that defends the nature
of the stolen soul.
The handful of daisies plucked
from the edge of the neighbor’s field
does not wilt knowing they will never
see the sun again.
The falling star does not stall
to watch the flicker of fireflies
or wait for the delayed wish
of the woman unsure of how much
she can afford to give away to the night.
Walk the shores hopefully
and cast your body onto the rocks
at risk of losing the life you are living
if it might yield one night of pleasure.
If we give ourselves, or not,
the heart will never forgive
for the opportunity lost
to invite happiness, the most weary guest,
into the light of the warm hearth and give her a place to rest
until she can move on with new strength
toward the heavy doors of eternity.
From this place of salty mist
and sand between your toes
breathe deeply
have courage
and make space
for the ocean of light
that is about to arrive
as the tide is commanded to do.
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