Thursday, January 22, 2009

Surrender



Surrender


I turned out the light to surrender to expanding night
There was nowhere but exhaustion,
After the party for the baby, and three ex’s playing musical chairs.
We danced circles to Pink Floyd and powwow,
Underneath balloons in honor of baby’s first year.
She’s starting to walk.
I’m amazed at what gets paved by the grind of time
By forgiving. Or do I say, surrender?

I should take rest easy then, this day near equinox marking
a festival of crossroads.
We had good weather.
Still I tumble relentlessly over this sleepless hump of worry.
I’m restless for vision, the next song.
For something other than the electrical switch that only takes
me back to where I started: an adobe room in a time of decay,
A small life on planet Earth, and what we imagine here.
When Rain called with the latest on her step-girl’s pregnancy,
We questioned what happened during the delicate
web of formation:
Drugs? Coffee? Pesticides in the salad?
Or the old uranium tailings that are everywhere in the winds
crossing Gallup?

I had to think through the dark and the dark was no longer
a beautiful pathway to stomp dances in the middle of a field
of stars. Funky, I called it.
Rough knowledge bares teeth in the nasty vortex of this
brutal civilization.

Think musical chairs, I tell myself. And begin to imagine
the falling away.
Each baby with ten fingers and toes, each dance taken.
The beauty prayer will bear me up and we will get there,
Yes we will, said the dark.
Surrender.


c Joy Harjo September 25, 2006

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