Fluent
by John O'Donohue
I would love to live
Like a river flows,
Carried by the surprise
Of its own unfolding.
Showing posts with label #soulpoetry. Show all posts
Showing posts with label #soulpoetry. Show all posts
Tuesday, January 21, 2014
Friday, January 17, 2014
sacred places
I sit here, cradled in the rock
and wonder who has rested here before me.
How many people have dreamed
and wept and seen the beauty of
nature and God from this spot?
In deep gratitude, I breathe.
and wonder who has rested here before me.
How many people have dreamed
and wept and seen the beauty of
nature and God from this spot?
In deep gratitude, I breathe.
Monday, January 13, 2014
soul-poetry
Curandera*
by Pat Mora
They think she lives alone
on the edge of town in a two-room house
where she moved after her husband died
at thirty-five of a gunshot wound
in the bed of another woman. The curandera
and the house have aged together to the rhythm
of the desert.
She wakes early, lights candles before
her sacred statues, brews tea of yerbabuena**.
She moves down her porch steps, rubs
cool morning sand into her hands, into her arms.
Like a large black bird, she feeds on
the desert, gathering herbs for her basket.
Her days are slow, days of grinding
dried snake powder, of crushing
wild bees to mix with white wine.
And the townspeople come, hoping
to be touched by her ointments
her hands, her prayers, her eyes.
She listens to their stories, and she listens
to the desert, always, to the desert.
By sunset she is tired. The wind
strokes the strands of long gray hair,
the smell of drying plants drifts
into her blood, the sun seeps
into her bones. She dozes
on her back porch. Rocking, rocking.
At night she cooks chopped cactus
and brews more tea. She brushes a layer
of sand from her bed, sand which covers
the table, stove, floor. She blows
the statues clean, the candles out.
Before sleeping, she listens to the message
of the owl and the coyote. She closes her eyes
and breathes with the mice and snakes
and wind.
* a curandera is a healer
** peppermint
Friday, December 13, 2013
my intention
School
Prayer
In
the name of the daybreak
and
the eyelids of morning
and
the wayfaring moon
and
the night when it departs,
I
swear I will not dishonor
my
soul with hatred,
but
offer myself humbly
as a
guardian of nature,
as a
healer of misery,
as a
messenger of wonder,
as
an architect of peace.
In
the name of the sun and its mirrors
and
the day that embraces it
and
the cloud veils drawn over it
and
the uttermost night
and
the male and the female
and
the plants bursting with seed
and
the crowning seasons
of
the firefly and the apple,
I
will honor all life
—wherever
and in whatever form
it
may dwell—on Earth my home,
and
in the mansions of the stars.
~
Diane Ackerman
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