Monday, April 28, 2014

How She Does It



Every week, she does this.
She stands at the bottom of a tall, bleak mountain.
Wind blows, rips iron clear off her armor, showing her jeans.
She still has the scars from where the wolves bit her.
She calls them mosquitoes, but she ain’t much bigger than they.
Pulls a hook from her pocket.
Where the ladder doesn’t reach, she carves her own way
Clear into the rock
She makes drawings where she goes
Happy cats, mostly,
And her dreams
and things she sees every day that you call dreams.
If wind whaps her face
She shrugs it off.
If a bird pecks at her back
She sheds just one long teardrop, which freezes into a bludgeon
And she fights.
If her hands freeze,
She may sprout wings if it suits her.
At the summit, someone greets her.
“We thought for sure you’d stay home,” they say.
She melds thin air into a beer bottle
bites off the cap
and takes a long sip. Then she smirks.
“What, and miss the sunrise?”

Under



I died
Let out a furtive breath
a ghost trapped in a cave.
I slip out of my skin
fingers stretch tenderly over cold stone
Which warm with winds through my ethereal lips
No longer constrained to one form
I bend and curve effortlessly throughout the rarely ploughed terrain
through gashes in granite
Caressing quartz and onyx, obviously
These feelings will be terrifying
(even spirits get spooked)
But in time I hope to sink to the bottom of a bottomless pit
The safest haunt
Bright, beautiful flora in a wet, hidden place
I will be the air, water and earth
Spreading further and further
And forget myself infinitely,
deeper and deeper.