03 19th, 2010

artwork by Jim Fitzpatrick

What’s all this about love?
You are a boy, and I am Maeve ready for men.
If you wish to kiss me, you must learn first.
My heart is not a shy girl longing for a lover–
I’ve had plenty of those,
and each a king or warrior or druid.
If you say you love me, then love will be my price:
half-hearts not welcomed here.
I will claim everything,
absolutely everything,
for only then can you be Maeve’s man.

Author’s Note: Celtic Queen Maeve is probably one of the most remarkable figures in Irish mythology. She embodies Sovereignty itself, the centre of our Souls, and without sovereignty, without living from our authentic core, we can never truly live or fulfil our potential. The secret is: in losing everything, you also gain everything.



Geis*

Posted by Jenn in Living Poetry
03 19th, 2010

Everything
changed

after you spoke, it was
as if I became
pregnant with joy,
unspeakable
pure-faced
joy.

It was
as if my soul was
revealed in your voice, an
intimacy
known to the
few,

to the Grainnes and Diarmuids
of every age

bound together, a chosen fate. 

*Author’s Note: “Geis” is an Irish Gaelic idiom from traditional mythology. for a taboo. It is not just a taboo though–often something spoken or chanted, a prohibition, obligation or vow laid upon someone, much like a “spell”. Basically it is a bond or link created, that is considered fated–to break a geis would be to destroy yourself. In this poem, the title “Geis” is meant to give the poem connotations similar to the story of Grainne and Diarmuird, where after speaking to one another (Grainne placed a geis on Diarmuird), they were bound to be lovers forever.



Mountain Dao

Posted by Jenn in Living Poetry
02 22nd, 2010

Up to the mountain top,
this wild place of
pine trees and
hickory oak.

Up to the mountain top,
river valley spread
out from ancient
mountain roots
like children behind their mother’s skirt.

Wandering path along the ridge,
hugging boulders cut by years.

Wisdom trees hold on,
hold onto the horizon,
let themselves be bent and turned
where few can go.

Here, there is Grandfather
and grandchildren,
Here, there is youth and old age,
sapling stretched green in the sun,
searching wind, soil, light and rain.
six hundred million year old rock weathered by
volcano, ice age, flood and time.

The brown hare hops off into the distance,
leading the way
up to the mountain top

as I leave behind human constructs and thoughts,
arising out of the dark valley
sleep
into pure white sunlight.

Even the salamander is out to
greet this day,
darting this way and that like
a snake’s glinted tongue.
He knows the way,
up to the mountain top.

A thousand generations
have passed this way,
and humans,
almost none

melting the mind
like snow into mountain,
bent and turned
along the edges of wilderness,
the Way the heart is weathered,
sharpness smoothed away
by the river of yearning,
a soft stone
dissolving
into sediment
leaving behind
soil
and the pure crystal peak
of mountain top being.

I will follow and sing,
trusting in the wild ways
stepping closer
moment by moment
up

up to the mountain top.



Meditating Rock

Posted by Jenn in Living Poetry
02 22nd, 2010

Lying on the ground,
my back curled up to soil,
dead wood, leaves, winter’s dreams.

I rest like snow,
like a rock lodged deep,
inert, still, silently aware and
full of presence.

I wait here on the ground,
not for anything or anyone
but
for waiting itself,
knowing nothing
but
this. No need for questions,
not on the ground.
No need for beliefs
or reasons why or how or where

because I am
simply
lying
on the ground

resting on earth
a billion years in the making of
now.

That is enough
That is more than enough
assurance for me here
in this moment,
lying on the ground.



Eno River Walking

Posted by Jenn in Living Poetry
02 18th, 2010

This place with the birds calling to one another,
the slow whir of river walking upon
age-worn rocks from another life,
red clay sinks down, accepts, slides,
green thorns covered with promises of spring,
snow like winter’s ghost melts into the earth.

The river runs and walks, then runs again,
the quiet eyes of trees observe
passing of time
passing of years
dropping their leaves down
sap rising
budding
shooting forth into fullness
the colour and splendour of death
as the fall of leaves comes anew.

But now, now their blood,
their heartbeat pumps stronger
after long, unconscious sleep.
The deer have eaten at bark and branch
during winter’s starving bite,
but now, now from roots
spread forth green blades,
each a speared desire for sun and air.

This place is open
and intimate
the pebbles and small shells
mingle together like brothers and sisters
at the riverbed,
each stone a story past, each shell a life long gone.

This place with its tall trees,
buckeye and oak: white, blackjack and laurel.
This place with holly, rhododendron, sycamore,
white ash, maple and beech, the trembling beech,
walnut, pecan, wild thorn, alder and dogwood,
sourwood and ironwood, honeysuckle,
a thick array of river birch, cedar and hemlock.
This place with grasses, grasses and grasses,
moss and lichen, ivy, sumac and creepers,
shooting bulbs wild with spring’s coming day.

And pine trees, who could not mention the pine trees,
the short-leafed pine in bunches with the loblolly pine drooping down,
long-leaf pine that needs fire to seed, fire to be freed,
ancient giants that covered this place long ago,
pine-cones everywhere before deciduous trees took root.

A sparrow peers at me now,
querying my intentions in this place,
then carries on, moves along feeding off the ground,
dancing with a hop in his step,
his lover nearby,
their white breasts glimmering
beneath brown wings and
gleaming eyes.

I am breathless,
breathless
at this place,
at its rolling sides rising up to blue skies,
this valley, this river course,
this place of cosmic lineage,
about to awaken to Spring again
like all other years — yet unlike ever before.

The joy that fills me
reminds me of home,
tells me I’m home,
tells me to walk softly on this clay,
to slip with it and slide with it,
to feel the leaves, the bark, the dead grass, the new grass,
the smooth stone, volcanic etrusions,
the woodpecker in the distance amidst creaking trunks.

I know this place in my dreams,
have known it for many years,
but this place is real,
this place breathes,
it lives,
carries with it memories
sinking in,
sinking into me,
seeping in like blood and breath,
like scent on the wind.

In this moment,
there is no me.
The woods, the river, the birds, the shore,
the silent white-footed mouse staring at me from his hole
as he melts into grey rock light,
blurring his edges,
not mouse, but stone,
not stone, but mouse.

So too I melt
dissolve
blend into the hues of green and brown.
I am earth and wind,
murmur of water as it kisses stones,
tree-creeper hopping, moving up bark paths,
wren in the distance shrieking his warning,
rising rocks emerging from the hillside,
winding way along a river’s long walk

all this I am,
all this flows in me and through me,
the Eno River walking and running, then walking again,
part and whole,
whole and part.

This place is real,
this place is home.

Note: The Eno River is my native NC watershed … the rocks here stretch back 600 million years and are very deep into the psyche of this area.



Hail Like Lotus

Posted by Jenn in Living Poetry
02 17th, 2010

Hail hits the house,
Soul trying to get in.
We build our minds,
place bolts on the doors,
locks on windows,
shutters,
blinds,
curtains,
mortar and bricks,
cement thoughts,
fears,
expectations,
desires.
We build our minds
and Soul wants back in.



01 27th, 2010

Last night, a dove cried on my window.
She wept for her lover in the fox’s belly,
her mourning woke me to moonless night.

“Little one,” I whispered across the sill,
“Come in and rest your tears somewhere safe.”

But she would not come near.
“You’re the wife of the fox who ate my man,
and your love is hot in him. If you feel sorrow,
then so will he, the one who ate your heart.”

Then I wept for her and for myself.
I shook with tears for all the loves
stolen and maimed in the world.

My Todd came home at first light,
his eyes a trickster laugh.

I wore my anger like a coat,
my hair a flaming red.

But he laughed at me and kissed my hands.
“Don’t be angry with me who holds your heart,”
he said with a toothy smile.
“I exist to make the little birds faster and the
sleek hares nimbler,
without me
they’d grow lazy and die, and where would be
the food in that?”

“I exist to make you, you, and
without me, you’d never learn
to be more than who you are now.
I am your longing and I will devour
until there is nothing left but an empty cup
filling up with the tears of the world.”



Kitsune Todd

Posted by Jenn in Living Poetry
01 26th, 2010

He was going about fox business
when I met him again.

The trees were thick and he wore that
hunter’s grin on long black lips.

And when I asked him of the day,
he said
“Kiss me quick.”

My heart ached like fangs sunk deep–
stealing the wind, a desert in drought.

I placed my lips to his cold wet nose
as he breathed in my vital breath.

No sound but the fire burning within,
now igniting in me as we breathed as one.

Heart sat stuck, stuck in my throat,
choking on care, desire, and whim.

He ate my heart with that fatal kiss,
devoured it bloodied red and raw.

My heart burned up in the belly of a fox,
I did not know love could empty the self.

The universe seeps in this hole for a heart,
pulse-pulse-pulsing with the beat of stars.

*”kitsune” is the Japanese word for a fox, but in Eastern culture, the fox is so much more than “just” a fox. They are shapeshifters who, like many other cultures’ Otherworld inhabitants, fall in love with humans, mete out justice, trick the greedy and foolish, etc. The fox who has kept appearing to me in my border dreams is very much a kind of Otherworld fox … and his name “Todd” is linked to my animus. This poem comes from an actual dream-body experience.



Todd

Posted by Jenn in Living Poetry
01 24th, 2010

It’s enough,
his laughing eyes to melt with mine
as he walks past me uninhibited.
“See me,” his sleek perfection demands.

It’s enough,
to be a woman alone with him,
in a wild, long-forgotten place
of all things, to find him waiting.

It’s enough,
his face a full moon of recognition
and my mind unsettled by his desire.
“You’re mine,” his smiling fangs declare.

More than enough,
his bold attempts at wooing, enough
to make me fall in love forever,
my soul caught naked by a fox.



Red Birds Laughing

Posted by Jenn in Living Poetry
01 22nd, 2010

Something drew me out
from a long unsensing sleep
into the woods behind my house.

Maybe it was the snow melting into sunshine
or the blue morning deepening into noon.
Maybe it was the red birds laughing outside my window

or perhaps it was the silence
between their songs giving way
to another world awakening from seed.



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