Meditations From the Center: 2

SUNDAY POEM

MEDITATIONS FROM THE CENTER: 2

In the center of my head is a rain-washed
dawning

In the center of my head cirrus
clouds cross a cobalt sky

In the center of my head a hermit thrush
sings sweet wilderness

In the center of my head a bare room
opens in the fragrance of your hands

In the center of my head is a mirror
in which your face is reflected

In the center of my head a wet beach
bears the footprints of your love

 

As always, I’d love to hear your poems, your voice, in the Comments. Come and share the songs of your heart.

My newsletter subscribers are the first to hear about upcoming classes and programs. From time to time, I also send them special invitations, gifts and offers that are exclusive to my list. To subscribe, please fill out the form below.

 

2 Responses to “Meditations From the Center: 2”

  1. Mechaieh (@) says:

    A response of sorts (aka more an inspired-by-this than a direct reply):

    After the Floods

    In a corner of my room, a rain-washed drawing

    smudges its black and cobalt remains

    like a bruise of feathers across the sticky

    blank slate of loss, like the photos

    I couldn’t save, their emulsions bleeding

    echoes of fine Venetian endpapers

    onto half-cent envelopes of holiday cards

    from people themselves long evaporated

    from everywhere except these mementos.

    The more I stare, the more I am struck

    by the splinter-thin blur

    between grotesque wreckage

    and beautiful ruin –

    how a brown, crinkled scrap of a rose

    can speak more of my worlds

    than a dozen lush, satin-bright blooms

    and how I want to be both

    the history and the hope

    a sweet mingling of dryness and dew.

    How to be such

    and not too much?

    Next to the picture,

    a pitcher:

    tell me what to pour on your palm.

    ~ m

    • Hiro Boga (@) says:

      Mechaieh, thank you for this lovely poem.

      “how a brown, crinkled scrap of a rose
      can speak more of my worlds
      than a dozen lush, satin-bright blooms
      and how I want to be both
      the history and the hope
      a sweet mingling of dryness and dew.”

      Oh, yes!