Sunday, May 10, 2015







                                  Winter


There is a blizzard on the mountain.  There is no tea.
The wailing wind the only sound tonight.


An old Japanese man hefts a load of firewood on his
aching back up the steep mountainside. Fog and ice
coat the slope.


It is late. His hair is white.
There is no tea. There is a blizzard here.


Wind whines and whips the night. A lament like abandoned animals
might make takes this empty space for a crazy ride.


A bereft fright devoid of any light his only animation.


Trudging through thick pockets of cloud uphill, feet
slog and slip in sticky mud pasted across blades
of rock that destroy boots and frostbit toes
in a moment’s boyish mistake.


A patina of webbed thought covers all he sees or
hears, may touch or smell, sucks life straight out, leaves
him bent right over in the frigid air.


There is no tea. There is a blizzard here. It persists perhaps
for one hundred forsaken miles.


Alone.   He, and we, do trek on through the freezing haze,
deliverance whispers our murky fates in names we barely
know.


Yet….where shall we go,
                                           and how, for whom,
and why?


There is no tea.  There is a blizzard here.

Saturday, May 2, 2015

FIRST KISS


 



The first day in your country, after I’d arrived from the summer-like weather of southern California, you showed me the hilltop monastery taken over
by the Nazis who ruined the spacious chapel filled with gleaming icons
of Christ and the saints into a horse stable of desecration; then after
the war a few years’ later the Soviets took their turn at rampage,


transformed it into a psychiatric hospital for dissidents and their political
re-calibration, their psycho-social castration, doing their best to scrub all remaining traces of god and human holiness from the stone walls.

A friendly Lithuanian nun gave us an informal tour, you thoughtfully translated her strange words as we walked among these stone-walled rooms coated with so much human joy and misery, solace and danger conjoined. Later, we ambled down the hill through stands of leafless birches and evergreens taking photos of each other in our heavy winter coats.

Afterwards we ate lunch in the cozy hotel near a lake where I joked about the old balding guy with a puny pony tail and his sour faced friend seated across from our table being Russian gangsters, they’d driven up to the place in an old gray Mercedes spewing smoke out the rear. You ordered a Chinese dish with fish and rice --I had a delicious pancake with flavorful mushrooms and gravy, a traditional meal you said.

After lunch we drove a few miles across the city to the special cemetery where your beloved uncle and grandmother are buried. You parked near the entrance and we sat silently still in your front seat on that cold day in November.

I was scared to tell you how much I’d wanted to kiss you in the hard wooden pews of the old church an hour or two before, but jet-lagged and lonely I gathered courage somehow and began to speak now about this desire to touch you, to begin to bridge this distance between us.

It didn’t go well for some minutes as you seemed startled, your blue
eyes receded further away and I wondered if I’d made a huge mistake
traveling all these hours and miles to meet after those long happy talks
on Skype.

You sat a little stunned, at the steering wheel as we watched people
with heavy coats, somber and silent, eyes on the ground, walk out
of the cemetery on that cold November day in ones and in twos. I don’t
know if I’d ever felt so alien, so strange, almost homeless there in the passenger seat of your car while my mind careened, imagining a trip
ended before it had begun.

How it then happened I still cannot exactly remember, but suddenly
out of this uncomfortable quiet your moist lips met mine and our eager
tongues found each other in an urgent hunger, strong and delicious, striking us

both like a pleasurable lightning bolt, and there parked in front of the Kaunas
cemetery on that gray day in late Autumn tucked into the front seat of your silver Volvo our lives began this lovely bewildering dance of two persons coming together at a shifting boundary of life and death, an illusory fence

really where headstones and crumbling monasteries stand rising
from a past of loss and pain and guide us like birch trees leafing
shyly in early Springtime on the Baltic into the mystery of what yet
we might become.



Friday, May 1, 2015

Common Knowledge

If real faith is knowing in our deep bones
that through empty space we are forever
free-falling, true joy is sitting silently


in a vast park on top of a picnic table
with a friend whose mother will die
from cancer also and suddenly being


surrounded by small flying seahorses.
The day is dazzling, the sky so vividly blue,
a stand of birch trees in the distance
at the edge of the greenest grass
you’ve ever seen.


There is nothing, nothing, anywhere
to fear. You wake up laughing,
happier than you’ve felt for years.