David Whyte, English poet
a bull moose dancing
you could ask me where I sleep -- I sleep here
among the oaks
you ask me what I believe -- I believe in everything
I believe in nothing at all
did I eat the bitter root -- yes it tasted awful like death
but I chewed and I swallowed
and did the animal power appear -- yes I am a bull moose
dancing around the small fire
I am something more than a man – no I am nothing
a grain of sand in the desert
I am finite and infinite – a part of the one the void
and so are you eat the bitter root
sleep here among the oaks
let the danger set you free
james lee jobe
and what if we become animals of the sand pit
imagine a world of sand
now imagine the heat that empties your heart
by the bucketful
one scoop at a time
will your leathery hide protect you
from the noon sun
will it protect you from the grief
that eats at your belly
biting and chewing away
the plumbing of your life
this sand pit is larger than the world
larger than time
you trudge along
sinking in to your ankles with every step
and the end is never any closer
there is no promise to hold you
and no faith to sustain you
and then the sun is beating you
like a cruel master
and in the bright sky above
a lone hawk circles
james lee jobe
That the sorrows and hurts, each as they come, only strengthen my resolve to be a better person, and also this; that from these sorrows and hurts I learn all over again how to forgive.
james lee jobe
Nothing in the cry
of cicadas suggests they
are about to die
- Basho
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james
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