Remember the Water
I asked a Dalit man if he liked his job.
Upon Asking a Man If He Liked His Job
As it’s
a dreadful industry, death
Stacking
sticks of wood, then shoveling
Their
white remains into the depths
Its glow
and he work side by side
Kissing
sweaty on the quarried blocks
Slick
and final and steep
Are
wrapped and left for ash
Where
holy grounds meet flow
In
layers of trash and weed
On stone
cut rough and polished underfoot
Textiles,
awash in waves and wind
Tossed
in the sorrow of piles
Is
soaked in perspiration and fume
The burn
and wind enwrap his body
Against
a sky that scorches flesh
At the
holiest of spots in heat
The
incendiary force of which by choice
They are
brought in wraps of orange
In its
ironic humid smoke
Wafts up
the steps like barbeque
Still
months later in the throat
Beside
him in humanity
If my
ticket hadn’t cost more than
He makes
in a year
He rides
these steps of fate
I ask
him if he likes his job
And his
response lights a flame
His
father, and his father, and so on
Six
generations to his knowledge
Counting
firewood by body weight
Stacking,
lifting, shoveling
God
wants me to do this
He says,
through a smile of teeth
Stoic
and willing, unencumbered
By the
larger question
But by a
man lying nearby surrounded
With
fresh leaves, an incense cake
At his
head, his wife leaning
Over his
purple sunken eyes
My
fellow gazes on the dead man too
Imperceptibly
nodding, sizing him up
Slow,
like a heartbeat, counting
His
weight in sticks and blaze
In the Oaxacan Waves
Parisian woman
Not a day over thirty
In the Oaxacan waves
Not quite sixteen,
My son, the lucky boy
Swims the swells. Blue
Pacific glee is all around
Together in water, about as much
As life allows a son
Freckles and teeth, as
Her breasts dance the surf
Minnows underneath
Dart unrestricted in their youth
As if, in silver and gold
They too sea
Can I cleave to this, stirred
By plump je ne sais quoi
And skirt the sorrows of the seas?
Can he escape the drowning?
We laugh, degajé to death
The evidence is in
She twirls at impact
As he dives under
You Are Lucky
You are lucky, you tell yourself. You saw it happen: A tree that sprung from the soil two hundred years ago sprawls along the ground. It had bent in winds so much more hurling than these.
This evening, on your walk through the woods, you've seen it fall! The mouth is agape, gathering and gathering. You watch, watch the space the tree had inhabited. Sky pours into it's space. No one is around except you, and the animals have gone silent at their limbs.
You reflect on the initial crack that turned your head, the slow motion of its falling, and the air that swept up in a warm gust. Yet, you mostly stand at attention. It's as if by waiting, the dissipated sounds might be followed by pheromones, or a breakthrough. There will be time for calculations later. Concerns for your safety haven't even occurred. You have witnessed something sacred in this moment. You stand quiet with ringing in your ears from the cracking and that final snap of its trunk. This is worth more than what you've been eyeing in the showroom, or real estate, or trips you've craved for a while. As your eyes close, you recall friendships as a child, how your lungs filled and fainted with laughter--how everything smelled and everything meant and everything spacious.
Spacious like the gap in the canopies before you when your eyes lift. And when a single bird begins to chirp again, you know it's time to keep going. And so you do, with the sun now beckoning at its extreme angle.
What Can You Do?
What Can You Do?
Although the air quality alerts
You're hiking again
For clarity. A determination to
Live some way or another
Or have your lungs
Fill and faint with laughter
When you come across the poor thing
Laying there ahead
In the calm best light
With the sun looking curious
From the haze of the fires in Canada
And there she is in front of you
What can you do
But soak a cracker in water
Lay down a few cherries
Avert your eyes
Step back on the path
To ease its alarm
Decide that you cannot fathom
Ending its life
Watch it spin
On its dusty side
The back legs limp
Make the center
In circles of pain
From a raptor
Affliction, or snapping
Of spine
What can you do
But soak a cracker in water
Lay down a few cherries
And carry on
Except for my Sons
School is closed again today
Half way there, I slow peddle to a dock, lean my bike against the railing
The color of lake is the same as sky And the rail is gray with shadows. The grayscape penetrated only by a rising carp about to die
The Court of the Oceans had made it clear that we might sue for their warming
All picnics are cancelled through town. Children will stay on screens in bedrooms while fans churn the air
After the storm, trees and choirs and fun runs and electricity are down.
Down it all
Except for my sons, I would dive into the deepest sky. Hop the rails to some cobalt forest. Close the system down
I would swim to the wide dark center, close to where it all began
Except for my sons, blooming extraforcial beings. And this duck and I, floating on a curtain of dock, sharing this gray and open expanse, free as birds
A Holy Place
A Holy Place
You may sit wherever you please. Here, a menu, there are the services. Fan blades begin to whirl above your table
Burnt oil wafts up and out the open wall over the colors of vendors in the market
Yes, you'd like water and fresh coffee. The market women note you are dining at a place they will never
The one with menus handed to the customer. Where the silverware matches, with tablecloths, glossy, new and red
And you utter thank you again and again. That is a fine choice. You sit proud and contented, the only one in the room
Some places are sacrosanct. Incense proves this, as does the pretty print of Shiva hovering above waters
And the restaurateur standing attentive in a Pepsi mirror
In The Clouds
In the clouds, there will be no shaking journals or dancing diaries
Zero neatly scrawled pages of velum, with tea stains or tears
Absolutely no outpouring of love, nor bloodletting of any sort
So many confessions will be spared online
It is to say the future will read nothing of our discontentment
Spared the strata of our favorite illusions, in bound pages
Honest, unedited, discovered in its feces and scars
Instead, the clouds will pour constantly of disinfected rain
We will wonder how paper
If rough drafts. Contemplate pens
What early man scrawled and spat at the rudiments
Of sheets