Becoming Light.
"Let them learn how to live and die more lightly."
Czeslaw Milosz
Mists rise in the valleys, skim off
with the breath of farm ponds.
As when we are no longer weighted down
with wants. Even as gravity pulls
us closer to our mother, Gaea,
even as the flesh draws down, flattens,
squeezes bony discs, compacts them,
we must levitate, glide across that distance,
smell that lap of death as waters
wash and waste the shore,
the eyes see farther, can now
make out the riffles on the far bank
as the fisherman slides in
on a muted motor's momentum.
Whole peoples have let go,
drifted off like dry leaves,
whole species slipped away,
and in the night, while we slept,
the incredible weight of a woman,
all of her, disappeared, all her words
and prejudices and opinions
and determinations and plans,
and projects and memories
and wants all evaporated.
On good days,
I rehearse this moment,
lift the weights one by one,
test their densities in my palm,
raise a wetted finger to the wind.
COPYRIGHT 1999 Commonweal Foundation
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 1999, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.
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