Does a kite make sense when all it wants to do is leave?
So let it go.
If up it goes, down it must sometime come,
and when it does, it will have seen much sky.

Teased by leaves of impossible hue,
November coaxes her song, late in coming
but pure in its lyric of white death.
She sings, crouched in waiting on hollow, haunted haunches
squeezing out what remains of flourishing days.
Confidently, she trades them for the unknown future
where day and night swap places.
Grey becomes the new day,
greyer still the night that swallows up
scented Summer’s boasting, silken Fall’s lust for Spring.
Stop, she says.
Stop to hear this song about nothing,
these words that have sewn up sown seeds,
entombing with wordless serenade the last vestiges of living
and, instead, insistently hums her song,
her late and last and lingering notes;
notes only overshadowed by the noisy whines
of Spring’s new calling.
Photo thanks: writingasjoes.blogspot.com
His was to be a long and heavy road. But all roads that lead to healing places necessarily pass through fetid gardens of defeat before arriving at redemption’s fresh air. His head pounded with that most precise of head pains otherwise known as the hangover. His drinking had become so bad in recent months that such things were unheard of in his experience. Why “hang-over” when one was already leaning over the edge of insanity?
He met with Kent, Roger and Reed for what seemed like hours, his stomach and his head reminding each other of their shared misdeeds. Soon, a sense of clarity began to come. They would determine an appropriate date when he would tell his story to the church board. Later, with the board’s direction, he would do so with the congregation. In actual fact, the board later decided to deal with it behind closed doors rather than alert the whole congregation of his woes and perhaps deepen rather than lighten them. Just as well, since the very thought of pursuing such public exculpation was more than his fractured conscience could bear. There was to be nothing delicate about any of this. It was without opportunity to either titivate the sad truth or remove himself from its consequences. His mind reeled and boiled and he was drowning in the stew of his own making. And yet, on another level, he had secretly hoped for this. It meant freedom and, if he still remembered anything from theology 101 it was that true freedom comes through the shame of another.
Since beginning his ministry at the church slightly more than two years earlier, he had immersed himself in the work. Mostly, it helped remove him just a little from the overwhelming sense of exile and loneliness that had stormed his consciousness. It was an Apollo sized burden of inner cataclysm that had taken him quite by surprise. He was a Canadian boy through and through. He bled white and red, knew the ethos of the place by heart, understood the bad inside jokes, stupid politics, heady talk shows, social pariahs, and art house music scene inside and out. Often had he quipped, “you can take the boy out of Canada, but….”
He knew her and she knew him.
So then, why the hell had he thought it a good idea to pack up and leave for a call in Oregon? For years, his spiritual journey had been tottering on the brink of collapse, built on a thin, wispy and kitschy evangelicalism that no longer supported his increasingly dangerous questions. Or, at least, the shoes didn’t fit anymore. He needed to stretch his theological arms, raise his head above the crested waves in the wading pool and look for deeper water, or else find land and toss the whole thing.
But other voices had grown louder in him. Subtle but insistent voices calling him to dig deeper, or in other places more suited to his shovel. His was a spiritual spade meant to dig from the left that had been tending garden from the right. They seemed incompatible, at least from where he was then. His limited vantage point disallowed view of the whole garden in all its expansive glory. He had grown tired of snap peas and longed for the bitter taste of something new and fresh but still excitingly foreign to titillate his bone-dry palette.
For as long as he could remember he yearned for all things ancient, dark and mysterious, thoughtful and mystic; a poetic theology wed to an older spiritual language better fitted to who he had always been. That yearning had drawn him into the heady confines of orthodox and catholic spirituality which offered a context for a more sacramentally nourishing, liturgically demonstrative faith. It drew him to places where matters of social justice and peace-mongering weren’t just hip, new phrases but built in, irrevocable realities. It meant moving to live and work among a church community whose notoriety (accursedness to some) was for its inclusivity. More intriguing still were the twice yearly worship services with the local Catholic parish, Ash Wednesday and Pentecost.
He was hooked.
The diverse little community in this quaint Oregon college town, pastored by the man now sitting to his left (pun intended) had been that place; the only place whose centripetal force had provided sufficient gravitas to pull him out of his home and native land. The journey however would prove much more perilous than either of them could have imagined. The stress of that journey, coupled with a DNA predisposed to narcissistic, alcoholic self-destruction provided a primary reason for why he sat in this very room under such horrid circumstances. A long, serpentine road lay ahead, the end of which, only God knew.
For him, right now in this room, that was enough.
His was to be a road of warn and worn,
saddled in piecemeal fragility, poised upon the brink of his otherworldly heart.
No rings of Saturn to juxtapose here with there, horizon with fingertips.
No multiple moons taking turns rising and falling in the sight-line of his dreams.
No dusty, chemical-winds racing to pour themselves in heaps of derivative normalcy.
Beyond the vale of his thoughts, in pools of reflective light, came time
time…
time…its slow ache, d r a w n out, s t r e t c h i n g then from now from when.
Along the borderlands of his discontent there lived others,
other souls of perishable flesh, volatile spirits, meandering hearts
who linger around burning garbage cans hoping to catch but a glimpse,
a passing glance of someone whose hands are still warm
whose life still contains the fragrance of love,
whose passions remain undulled by restraint and the ticking clock of desperation.
Then, as night falls from day falls from night,
a single drop of blood trickles down his shredded cheek.
His was a life renewed, born again in the tattered oneness of a cracked, brittle rosebush.
He had found a place of belonging among them in thorn-ed bliss.
Her many colored head, bedecked in Autumn’s finery
reclines against soft, brown-hill’d breasts.
Hunching shoulders of sleeping valley walls
protect the lingering leaves, giving them pause
to remain a little longer,
a little longer,
a little longer still for she knows of Winter’s intent.
Her rugged secrets remain, untainted,
even though she hungrily gave herself, surrendering
her supple haunches as Summer’s later lover.
But soon, her long, white atonement,
blankets her with redemption’s cooling hands.
The touch of icy claws rakes her back,
caressing her with sweet death.
She is purified in her dark sleep.
Then, as though in a dream, an untouched virgin
rises again in the womb of Spring.
Half a day and half again
since Donegal’s had seen the man
who truddled round the farberquim
the porter claimed he’d not seen him.
And grumpy Grifflabasherim
insisted he’d seen nowt of him.
Then near to half past quarter ten,
aspied he was near Quibulen,
with characters of shifty sort
and women, or so they report.
His coat in tatts, his trousers torn
his nose a’blooded, face forlorn.
with scuffed up shoes and smudged up knees,
for Shloope was shloshed at Schniffery’s.
Still, so still in your prison bed, saddled with weighted, watered coat.
Your shoulders, no longer subtle and seductive,
but rounded now, head prayerfully bowed.
Your once spiny shanks give way to your insanely colored demeanor
shared only here and now in these brief moments.
No one visits anymore to poke and probe and penetrate,
their sweeter fare to mix and merge for tea and sated palettes.
Patiently you abide the loneliness, forfeiting fellowship of other petaled sojourners-
now ghosts. Their spirits haunt Spring memories and taunt of Winter’s coming.
Your will wanes with the daylight hours;
your breaths are shorter, arms colder, with the grey horizon closing in.
Yet, alone you may be, but lonely you are not
for peeking out from rumpled soil where things long dead, or sleeping,
are others’ voices who pine for you to rise again, resplendent in former glory.
This you promise, but for now you shiver, brinking on edge of night
when sleep, finally, is yours and
you are reborn
once
more.
If two is three but less of one
and one means two where one meets one,
then all is none where few are gone
but few are gone where gone are none.
Still once is twice that becomes thrice
and quattro means once more than thrice
then quarter main is main times four
if less than main then less than four.
So now I end my ‘rithmetic
my brains all beat up with a stick.
If ever numbers you would know
look elsewhere please, I’m far too slow.
Slip shod past the wimplebee
goes Woodriff Shloope, at half past three.
This Shlizzmagora found his way
to Littleman’s wharf, or so they say.
Then Woodriff’s portulimpical arc
sat still while still he could be park’d
at Donegal’s the story goes
to drink eleventy more of those.
Now, the dishlee, Grifflabasherim
found Woodriff Schloop and asked of him
to kindly wait till half past three,
to slip shod past the wimplebee.
She pulled into the driveway not four minutes later, her thoughts swirling in a cacophonous mixture of rage, confusion, and concern. Even in that short time, she had to crack the windows enough to coax out the insistent smell of his all-day intoxication. She was at the door long before him, slamming it open while he was still navigating the step, that endless step, out of the van to the ground somewhere far below. When he finally made it inside, her feelings of abandonment and emotional rape took over. A family picture found its way off the wall and lay demolished on the floor. It was a convincing sound that scared their eldest son, waking him up.
A family was coming apart at the seams and he knew it. He let her rant. What else was she to do in such a moment? His self-esteem was lodged somewhere in his lower intestine anyway. “Let’s finish it”, he thought carelessly. The minutes seemed like hours as his greatest fear in being found out had already, begun its slow work of building a reality, imperceptibly at first; a new reality that might include honesty and a projected-self deconstruction. Eventually, his nights would be spent in gratitude for what was occurring right here, right now.
These were not those moments.
She grabbed blankets, a pillow and him, tossing them all into their camper which was parked beside their small Oregon rancher home. It seemed to take forever for him to find the bunk where he would sleep that night. Everything spun as though he’d been tossed, shame and all, into a blender. What would be produced from this harrowing concoction no one would know for some time. He stumbled outside again long enough to void his stomach of a small percentage of the liquid hell he’d pounded down that day. The lawn received his offering without comment. With throat burning, stomach eased and spirit desecrated, he climbed back inside and fell asleep instantly.
In what seemed an insultingly short time, the camper door swung open. With a head that felt stuffed with yesterday’s newspapers and paraffin wax, he rose to hear a quaky voice, “time to face the music.” She’d been busy. The night before, despite the late hour, she’d made numerous desperate phone calls to what few trusted friends they had, seeking advice, weeping, yelling, whatever it took. Among them was one to his boss, their pastor. Kent was no stranger to life among alcoholics having led a church for years containing any number of them, some recovering, some not. His instructions were to bring him to the church office the next morning. There, along with other trusted colleagues, a plan for repentance and healing would be discussed. There was no way to know then the extraordinary significance of that repartee.
That meeting was thirty minutes from the moment she opened the camper door and the smell of sad desperation billowed out onto the street and into her frightened nostrils. They met with Pastor Kent in the relative calm of a neutral but comfortable room designed for meetings of civil, adult amusements. A space like this, having housed numerous Habitat for Humanity planning meetings, community events and senior’s teas was more conducive than the pastor’s office, sterile by comparison, and too easily stigmatized as the principal’s office where the bad ones go to get good.
Here, in this room, he was a broken person first, one in need of the face to face confrontation required for the cauldron of grace to begin the slow-cook process of nourishing repair. They spoke together at length, mining every nook and cranny of his troubled past, washing out the backrooms of forgotten and dark things, bent and sorry places that spoke of resentments and misery, choices made, unmade, never made; of lostness.
Given that he was both an alcoholic and a church employee, the situation dictated just the right collective into which he would be entrusted. This included Roger, a congregant whose recovering alcoholic status now reached into its third decade. With a word, he became his first “sponsor”, a term that was to become easily familiar. Also present was his dear friend and colleague, Reed, whose wife had called him out the previous night. Reed knew him intimately. He had provided a steadiness for his faltering steps as he struggled to find his way in a new church, a new community, a new country, a new theology. His family had freely lavished upon them guidance, the kind of information that makes completely new situations such as what he and his family had endured more navigable. Without them, he would not have survived even to see this dark day.
In the weeks that followed, he would become privy to what the walk of grace can actually look like when Christ followers every bit as sinful and broken as he combine their shared mess into a single, bitterly hopeful outcry of “Lord, have mercy.”
If we are made in God’s image and God sings, then we should be singing, too.
Ancient Wisdom for Modern Seekers
Spiritual Direction for Integrated Living
From liquid courage to Sober Courage
an anamcara exploring those close encounters of the liminal kind
Collaborating with the Muses to inspire, create, and illuminate
...in such kind ways...
"That I may publish with the voice of thanksgiving, and tell of all thy wondrous works." Psalm 26:7
Blog for poet and singer-songwriter Malcolm Guite
…in the thick of things
REFLECTIONS & REVIEWS
Seeking that which is life giving.
… hope is oxygen
Homepage of Seymour Jacklin: Writer - Narrator - Facilitator
If we are made in God’s image and God sings, then we should be singing, too.
Ancient Wisdom for Modern Seekers
Spiritual Direction for Integrated Living
From liquid courage to Sober Courage
an anamcara exploring those close encounters of the liminal kind
Collaborating with the Muses to inspire, create, and illuminate
...in such kind ways...
"That I may publish with the voice of thanksgiving, and tell of all thy wondrous works." Psalm 26:7
Blog for poet and singer-songwriter Malcolm Guite
…in the thick of things
REFLECTIONS & REVIEWS
Seeking that which is life giving.
… hope is oxygen
Homepage of Seymour Jacklin: Writer - Narrator - Facilitator