crows over the north saskatchewan river, early april, 2009
I have trouble with early spring, with a deep anxiety that seeps in with the first rivulets of melt. I'm fine now, now that it's mid-May, & the ground is dry & the river is bluegreen with summery silt. Now that there is green, there is sap-sticky air, now that the leaves have decided it is safe to unfurl, that tanagers are nesting & frogs sing coarse & elusive in the bogs.
This sort of panic is similar to the kind I feel in the mornings, especially when I wake suddenly -- I hate feeling pushed, thrust into some newness, out into something that feels stark & full of ambivalence. Not when I'm cozy in sleep, in winter, in rest -- I feel abundant then, rich & creative & safe. By mid-morning, I'm fine, because there will be purpose & direction & distraction. I'm just always a little uneasy of april's white skies, being dragged from hibernation, thrown into an unknown not quite awake, a wasteland not quite ready to change & grow.
* * *
spring says
spring says go now,
be born! & we are
pushed from
winter’s soft womb
with lungs full of blood
& amnion, a sticky cry to
separate us swift
from our hibernation,
our wantlessness, shift
us into beings with
sightless mouths open
always, desirous to reunite.
but the rough tongue
of the wind comes
like pinebark on skin,
harsh papillae of mother
cat on her kitten, licked
fresh & hairless –
go now, spring says,
now you are born!
but you are bare
& lost & red-willow
shocked, caught now
in the dialogue of air
& rock, exposed
to the crumbling language
of erosion, slow Os
leave your lips calcified,
a headlong slide
into the river,
cracked skull
shining on the wet
wash of ice. spring says
go, out under the
sky unheld by anything.
plagued by wordless
ache for the everything
we once had, we are
ghosts with eyes open,
grit our teeth in silent
yearning. go now, into
the spring & try to find
a way to survive, to
free yourself. admit that
you are wanting. admit
that you need.
2 comments:
I know what you mean. Sometimes spring is so brash.
Hi - I tried to email you, but i'm not sure if I still have a current address.
I'm coming to ottawa - are you there?
(Valerie who used to know you at foodbank and then went to haiti and then saw you once later and you gave me tea!)
613-720-3092
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