Showing posts with label Heart. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Heart. Show all posts

Saturday, January 4, 2025

By Ear

 


Sometimes, when I am writing, and I can't
quite hear the words in my mind, I speak them --
quietly -- so as not to frighten them away,
listening for the gentle resonance
of vowel sounds repeating themselves,
calling out to one another in a language of air,
their small sheltering caves echoing.
I listen for the well intentioned but uninvited,
the idea lacking grace, the bum note;
and I am reminded at times of my mother
who learned to play guitar this way,
listening closely to the Grand Old Opry
and the Hit Parade coming through that old
wooden radio, like a temple glowing,
pausing her mother's 78s again and again,
lifting its needle and setting it down at the start
to catch what didn't want to be caught,
to pull forth a sound she could already hear.
Sometimes I need to be reminded of
how to listen deeply, of the line that runs
directly from ear to heart, bypassing
all else, the sound of a single strum and a single
voice alone in a room, as simple as that,
the way all good songs begin.


Wednesday, December 14, 2022

ECHOCARDIOGRAM

 

There was a time, not so long ago,
when a young woman's hand sweeping
gently, purposefully across your bare chest
would spark a rush of movement
within the blood, stir the recognition
of one flesh meeting another, somehow
both new and ancient at once.
But today you have crossed a threshold
of sorts, where this young woman,
who balances perfectly kindness and business,
measures every bruised and weary chamber
of your heart. "Breathe in," she intones,
"Now stop. Hold that breath...Good."
From the corner of your eye, you can see
the black and white of the ultrasound,
like a closeup of the moon, or years ago
seeing your daughter for the first time,
hiccupping within her mother's frame.
You think, too, of the Buddha, said to pass
into prajnanibbana this way, reclined
on his left side, eyes half-closed, neither
looking nor looking away. But this,
this, you think, is merely a form of limbo,
the moment midway through the play
when the stage lights dim to a dusty blue
and the whole of the set is quickly rearranged.
You sit upright, button your shirt, surprised
by the sudden return of clinical light.
You thank her for her trouble, take the old soldier
in your chest -- by turns too fast, too slow,
too big for its own good -- meandering
down the hall, and out into the wintery day,
blustery and colorless, quietly resigned
to whatever might happen next.

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