Names long-listed for YHWH, the “I AM”



Denim woman reads a garden
Wounds heal in fragrance of forest
Skein of sea under silver wash of sky
Sleeping soil beneath eucalyptus leaves
Rush of winged elm seeds
Saskatoon pie, cooling 
Shout of sunrise over a lake, elohim shalom!
Small boy bringing home milk cows
Allegro woodpecker in a symphony of hemlock
Orb-weaver swinging off glass tower
Sweep of searchlight in starlight
Silver fringe of eclipsing moon
Kiss of chrysanthemum
Flicker of candle in clay jar
Sharp dart of love to the ribcage
Woodstove warming winter cabin
Mountain bluebird on palm of Mary’s son
Eight hours of deep sleep
Children at play in bluestem meadow
Children at peace in Palestine
Children at peace everywhere
Wars drown in the sea
Sea welcomes new rivers
End and Beginning

 

Etty Hillesum — Cosmic Sadness

 

 Ought we not, from time to time, open ourselves
to cosmic sadness?

She was young, only 27, with faraway eyes,
clear, and penetrating.

A Dutch Jew, with something of the early Christian about her.
Yet neither conventionally Christian nor typically Jewish.
She followed her own spiritual rhythm,
not inspired by church or synagogue,
dogma or doctrine:

When I pray I hold a silly, naive or deadly serious dialogue
with what is deepest inside me, which for convenience’ sake,
I call God.

Give your sorrow
all the space and shelter in yourself that is its due.

Slowly, they removed her streets, her paths, her beloved stretches
of translucent sky, her trees—that bowed down under the weight
of the fruit of the stars
—then her bicycle,
then her friends, then her family.

But if you do not build a decent shelter for your sorrow,
and instead reserve most of the space inside you for
hatred and thoughts of revenge—
from which new sorrows will be born for others—
then sorrow will never cease in this world
and will multiply.

When the train car pulled away from Westerbork,
toward Auschwitz, she flung out a note, later recovered:
The Lord is my high tower…
We left the camp singing…


I hate nobody, I am not embittered,
and once the love of mankind has germinated in you,
it will grow without measure.


Entering into Etty Hillesum’s diary is to step into
the evocative bodily fullness of life, to sink into the deep peace
between two breaths; into a deeper, radiant reality—
to taste of the way the world could be.

And if you have given the sorrow the space its gentle origins demand
then you may truly say,
life is beautiful and so rich, so beautiful and so rich
that it makes you want to believe in God.

 

This morning I am again thinking of Etty—how unsuited
she was to this world. How irreconcilable her soul,
how foreign her spirit is to the genocidal powers of this world.

At night, as I lay in the camp on my plank bed,
I was sometimes filled with an infinite tenderness and I prayed,
‘Let me be the thinking heart of these barracks.’
That is what I want to be.
The thinking heart of a whole concentration camp.

This thought is mine: how grieved—doubly grieved—
she would be, to see the Jewish nation-state, its current leaders,
this many years later, so efficient an oppressor.

Something else about this morning: the perception, very strongly borne in,
that despite all the suffering and injustice I cannot hate others.

All the appalling things that happen are no mysterious threats from afar,
but arise from fellow beings very close to us.

The terrifying thing is that systems grow too big for men
and hold them in a satanic grip,
the builders no less than the victims of the system,
much as large edifices and spires, created by men’s hands,
tower high above us, dominate us,
yet may collapse over our heads and bury us.

 Many would call me an unrealistic fool
if they so much as suspected what I feel and think.
And yet there exists in me all the reality
the day can bring.

Where did it come from, her ability
to open herself to the cosmic sadness of the world—
such radical, undaunted empathy—
that allowed this kind of love to enter, grow, and stay with her?

And can a fraction happen in us?

Held in Derision by Jordan Peterson

 

I’m wandering under the wayless stars,
over the naked breast of life, which resembles
the Great Sandhills of Saskatchewan. At a summit,
I see a breathing tree pointing at the sky.
I cover my face and drop to my knees.

The older I grow,
the more disarming my dreams.

The more wizened, the more fecund
my imagination.

There’s something happening to me–
a kind of interior feminization,
in active dialogue with my exterior.

Well, I’ve never been in demand as a he-man.
I would be held in derision by a Joe Rogan,
exampled, as sociocultural degradation, by a Jordan Peterson.
Although, I’ve seen the man weep,
and thought,
he may not be far off,
the turn toward humility and inclusive compassion.
Though I could be wrong.

Perhaps I’m hormonal.
Deb reminds me,
“Andropause is a thing. It’s been going at you for a while.”

Well then, bring it on!
For increasingly, a searching simplicity is stripping me;
a germinating serenity is bewitching me:
I dream the rise of silence in this sleepless city;
I imagine the encampments, gatherings of broken light,
crystalline and shimmering;
I envision nations searching their souls,
and celebrating, together,
the destruction of the very last drone;
I picture a peace not based on force,
but enlivening, artful, numinous.

So I am not a rational man.
Just a man who walks like an exposed soul,
believing the world, despite the ocean of human suffering,
is beautiful and has meaning beyond the meaning we give it,
or can possibly imagine it.

In the end, I hope they’ll say, he was undone,
by the intimate perplexity of a tree,
pointing beyond the sky.

 

Whole World With His Breath

Great granddaughter and her father, December, 2023

 

…remembering
the time you, only twenty, a first-aid man
in a mill town, delivered a baby up north,
that slipperiness, the shout the baby gave
when he took in the whole world with his breath.

– Patrick Lane, from The Quiet In Me


Sometimes the mystery of existence
gets so embedded in utility,
that language, life, the world itself, feels
an abstraction, calcified.
Then, at the checkout, you see an infant’s hand, clasp
her mother’s little finger,
and something upends your loneliness.
And what you’d conceded to the weeds
blooms open, and you’re captive
to all that is.
Everywhere you turn sends a charge: the wire cart,
the parking lot, the dent
in your Chevy, the pitted driveway,
the fading fence, Tabby
scooting through the patio door, the basil
in the kitchen window,
so green it’s barbaric,
the blackened kettle, the oolong tea,
all anointed—holy.
And now you know why a mortal wears a moonstone,
or cross or crescent, gets a tattoo,
carries a shell or a crystal in their pocket.
Not to seize, or repeat, but to remember, keep faith
with that moment,
your breath was deliverance, your heart
was a shout,
I am here! I am here!