Selfish

I am too eager. I claw at the earth with my bare hands in search of precious stones. Who said that the stones are precious? Why do I care that they said so? What do I seek by acquiring the stones?

If I would wait, the stones would unearth themselves. A river would divert its course to flow over this land and move away the sediment. The wind would blow away the layers of sand. But I do not have enough time. I have only a lifetime, and I do not know how long even that will be.

If I am to have the stones for myself, I must act quickly. I cannot wait for the forces of nature to do my work for me. I will not live long enough to take possession of the fruits of nature’s labor. So I go to the toolshed and return with a shovel. I start to dig more effectively than with my hands.

Why must I have the stones? Why am I not satisfied that someone else should have them? Why do they need to be had by any human? Why can they not stay in the earth where they are?

I am selfish on two levels. First, I think only of myself. Second, I think only of those who are like me; I think only of the human species.

When I remember that I am one with this world, then progress and development, especially economic, seem silly.

There are two wills at play. There is the collective will of humanity and there is the will of the natural world. As a species, we have grown strong and capable of bringing our will to bear, to great effect on the natural world. In many instances, the will of man overpowers the will of the natural world.

Then again, maybe this is the way of things. Maybe the surge in humanity’s power is not at odds with the will of the natural world. The will of the natural world will curtail man’s power in time.

Originally written: Friday, July 9, 2021, 11:28 AM

Faces

There are faces
In the clouds
They fade

As have those
Of people
I have known

The clouds shift
And different faces
Take form

As do those
Of passing strangers
On the sidewalk

The clouds stay
For an ephemeral moment
That lasts forever

As does the face
Of my lover
Looking down at me

Originally written: Sunday, Jul 18, 2021, 7:49 PM

Meditating in the Presidio

With my eyes closed,
My legs crossed,
And my hands on my knees

Sitting on a Mexican blanket
Folded and laid atop
A fallen log

I started to hear drops
Falling
On the leaves and the dirt

This
Broke the concentration
Of my meditation

As I worried
That it might
Start to pour

I forgot about it
And remembered
My breath

Uncrossed my legs,
Got a book out of my bag,
And stood up

I felt something fall
And bounce
Off the top of my head

And into
The crease
Of the open book

It was a twig
No longer
Than a quarter inch

It had not
Been rain
Falling

It was pieces
Of the trees
Cast down

July 20, 2021 at 09:31AM

Mountain majesty

He opens the door
To the deck

Steps out
Onto the wood

Looks up
At the mountains

Bows his head
And ambles forward

Humbly
Approaching their majesty

– Krys in Big Sky 06/10/21

June 10, 2021 at 09:31AM

Plane surveying

Through a plane window
There are a few
Simple sights—
The sky, the clouds,
And the ocean

But the land
Is complicated
At least because of
All the man-made structures
—Roads and buildings

But the natural land
Is also varied

By the spines of mountains
And the ridges
Running down the sides

The flat lands
That are different shades
Of gold, brown, and green

And the lakes
And other land-locked
Bodies of water

Which would be as simple
As the ocean and the sky
Going off forever
As themselves
And never changing

But the land-locked
Bodies of water
Are defined by their shores

And so contribute
To the land
Being more detailed
Than the sky, the clouds,
And the ocean

Originally written: Wednesday, Jun 2, 2021, 6:41 PM

Mountain birds

In the morning
The many birds
Sang
Like children
On a playground
Make noise—

Because they can,
Just to hear themselves,
Or because they haven’t learned
To keep quiet
And only talk
When it’s intelligent

But these are mountain birds
Robins and finches
Nesting in the pines
And the rafters of cabins
Picking worms from the soft soil

They lack the education
That the pigeons in the city
Have learned
To keep quiet, conserve their energy,
And eat trash when they can

June 06, 2021 at 04:05AM

Running to the water

I got up off my cushions
And ran
One bounding step
After another
To set
As few feet
As possible
Onto the hot sand
And reached the water
Quickly
Took two more bounds
In the shallow water
And then
Took off and soared
As best
As my young body could
My pointed hands
Were first
Into the water
And then all of me
Was in
And under
Suspended
And supported
On all sides
For as long as I
Could hold my breath

May 29, 2021 at 01:58PM

Windy beach

Lying
On the beach
In the sun
Wearing clothes
Because it’s windy
And a little cold
I squint
At the sun
Through the eyelashes
Of my one
Open eye
At a point
Where the light
Intermingles
With the threads
Of the jacket sleeve
On my forearm
Lain across
My forehead
Protecting
My face
From sunburn

Originally written: April 20, 2021 @ 2:08pm

Mountain pose

In mountain pose, I stand with my feet planted firmly on the stone mason man-made patio, arms outstretched and rising up with open palms. In my line of sight is a tall trunk of a tree, aligned perfectly between my hands. Framing its trunk with the inner edges of each hand, I trace its straightness, extending upward. Its symmetry surprises me, out here in nature, where I came to get away from the straight lines in the city. It makes me wonder, with renewed childish curiosity, if the straight lines in the city have some semblance to nature.

Modern beauty

In a sunset, I see beauty that might have meant something, if I had been born out of doors. If I had needed wood for a fire to keep warm. If rainfall had meant the bison would come to the water in three moons.

As it is, I see beauty in bath tubs and grocery stores with fully-stocked aisles. I see beauty in buildings, tall ones in cities and small ones in neighborhoods. I see beauty in the corner of a room where two walls meet the floor. I see beauty on the dinner table and between the drapes.

Through the window, I can see where building tops frame the sunset sky, and I cannot tell which I love more—the building side, that runs down into the life I know; or the skyward side, that runs up and up, to a life I do not.

Fallen leaf

I have a small tree that I bought at the wholesale flower market a few years ago. It stands next to the bookshelf, against the northeast wall in our apartment. Its leaves are green and large, almost like lily pads. This morning, I noticed a fallen leaf on the floor. I could see a gap in the tree where the leaf had clothed the naked branch, now exposed underneath. It was a curious moment, to see the single leaf laying there all alone on the hardwood floor. On a forest floor, it might not have seemed so odd, with so many trees about, and plenty of fallen leaves. But on the apartment floor, it was like looking at a crime scene. Similar to a body in the street, it couldn’t just be left there. It had to be picked up and thrown away in the trash, furthering the unnaturalness of the event.

Shadow yoga

Practicing yoga
My shadow practices with me
Doing as I do
In its own way
Black and flat
Against the stone surface
Stretching longer
Myself
Or my shadow
I forget who
Is leading the practice

Naked in the trees

Unclothed in between the trees out here
Welcoming back the nature
That got poured over in the city
With cement streets and concrete buildings
A few trees remain
In square foot sections of sidewalk
But not enough to stand between
And be surrounded by
Like the thick forest here—
The grass is overgrown, as it should be
Some trees knocked down, but not by man
Most trees still stand, as they should
And I stand with them, unclothed, at peace

Meditative hike

Gravel crunches from heel to toe
Counting its own cadence
For the group on the trail
To fall into step, synchronized
As the mind
Follows the body’s lead
Into a consistent rhythm
On the straight path forward
Mountain peaks up ahead
And tall evergreens on other side
Some fallen, long since withered
Crunch, crunch, crunch
Like counting one, two
And then back to one, over and over
With the nice scenery around
To chase away any possible complaint

An orange peel in the park

I was doing my exercises in the park, when I noticed a piece of orange peel on the ground, no bigger than a child’s palm. The inside of the peel was full of ants. Most of them were dead. I could tell because they weren’t moving. I’ve never seen a live ant sitting still, have you?

I wondered about how they died. Could something in the orange peel be poisonous for ants? Maybe it wasn’t poisonous in a small amount, but the dead ants were gluttons that ate too much of the orange. But I didn’t think this was probable either, because I’d never heard of ants being gluttons, only about them being strong and hard-workers.

I noticed there was a trail of ants leading away from the orange peel. It was a little hard to see because this part of the forest floor was in the shade and the black ants blended in with the dark dirt. I put my hands on my knees and leaned over to get a closer look. I saw the general direction of the trail of ants and started shuffling my feet to follow it. I followed the trail for a few minutes. It went a long ways. I was hoping to find an ant hill at the start of the trail, but I got bored and went back to my exercises.

Among the dead trees

We stepped off the trail, into a clearing in the woods where many trees had fallen. There was a lean-to that appeared to be man-made, dozens of broken branches were leaned up against the larger trunk of a fallen tree. Other branches were laid over the top of the fallen truck. In this way, there was a wall and a roof made from broken branches. We climbed on top of the fallen trunk. On its side, the boughs extended longways from the trunk, hovering at varying heights above the ground. Several trees were fallen this way, with their boughs interlaced, making a lattice. She said, “It’s like a playground.” I nodded my head in agreement, dangling my legs about ten feet above the ground, sitting on one of the boughs. “It’s chaotic,” she said. This inspired deep thought in me. I asked myself silently, “Yes, I also feel it is chaotic, but why?” It occurred to me that there was a lack of symmetry. In a forest full of life, all trees stand tall, with their roots in the ground and their branches reaching toward the sky. In this place, the trees laid on their sides. Their roots had been torn up; they hung loosely, with no soil to drink from. Broken branches were strewn on the forest floor, disconnected from their trees of birth. The lattice created by the interlacing boughs of the fallen trees was not natural. There were no leaves on the boughs. These trees were dead.

Excerpts from A Trip in Montana

I am a little off balance now as I walk. And so it begins.

Large ants crawl on the Mexican blanket. I am interested in their movements.

The shadows have caught my attention as they dissipate with the movements of the clouds between the sun and the ground.

It is starting to open up. Ideas in my head seem to be connected.

My friends are talking on the deck above. I am on the patio below. Their words are disruptive. They are talking about college.

I have a desire to put on my shoes and go into the woods.

I am going into the woods, to discover species anew and to give them new names.

It is hard to write
With the light so bright
On white paper

As I put my pen to paper, I almost forget the words, but still they come to me somehow, flowing from objective reality itself, then through my senses, and seamlessly into Word.

I feel the sun hot on my shoulders through my shirt.

An ant crawls up the leg of my shorts.

I have found a convenient stump to sit on and write.

There is an ant on my left pointer finger, probing me with his antennae.

I need to get out of the sun. My neck is already burnt.

I am tripping, assuredly. I have wandered a bit farther into the woods, where there is some shade. I stepped across a crumbling trunk, like a balance beam, to get here.

I can hear my friends laughing behind me.

I begin to feel fear for the future; fear because this good feeling will come to an end.

I remember the Bene Gesserit mantra: “Fear is the mind killer.”

The fear comes from my ego. When I remember that I am part of all this, the fear goes away.

There are certain words that reassure me. They are often phrases or quotations. Some degree of spirituality, it seems, is just to memorize words, and then, when the right time comes:

(1) Recognize the appropriate situation.

(2) Recite the words in your mind.

(3) Let action flow forth from your body with the realized meaning of those words.

Again, I start to think of the future, and ill feelings immediately follow. Stay present! Stay mindful! This is the heart of my practice.

I fear so much for the future. I fear so much for my ego.

I am concerned for the physical health of my body.

I am concerned from the performance of my financial investments.

Even as a bug lands on my hand, I check to make sure it is not a bee that can sting me. So what if it is?

I am a part of all this. If the bee stings me, it is a part of all this.

It is like the book that I cannot recall the name of. Ishmael, there it is.

He talks of how man was in sync with nature before. This is how it should be. This is the answer.

All of man’s developments have placed him in a position above nature. Many of man’s modern problems would be solved if he would return to his place in nature.

Now, that seems unlikely. It would mean the death of many humans on our overpopulated planet. We have trodden too far down this track.

I hear my friends laughing in the distance. I wonder if they appreciate the deeper power of the trip. Or do they take it all to be just funny visuals?

As they speak with each other, they are kept from going deeper into their own minds.

I think of the time. I do not have a watch. I am fully tripping now.

I wonder how long I have been standing in this place. My legs have held me just fine, but when I look at them, I am unsure of how they operate.

I do feel taller. This is something Sean mentioned he often feels while tripping.

When I misspell a word or scribble, I think, “Don’t worry, they’ll get it.”

But I must realize, they won’t get it. All of THIS, is captured only in my humble words.

I should stop writing and enjoy it.

It occurs to me to draw.

I laugh at myself for thinking I could draw such beauty.

I start to feel ill feelings. I feel them run a familiar track inside of me. I see them, like rushing rivers, encountering the dam of my heavily-fortified ego.

I observe, dangerously at this time, what my ego is built of.

The wind blows. I let it pass. I pick it back up.

My ego is built from who I think I am. My history, my present physical body, what others say about me …

It is hard to keep track of this thought.

I am fully tripping. I have stood in one place for so long, I had almost forgotten what it’s like to move.

I am fully tripping—these exact words occur to me again.

I constantly have these thoughts:

– What should I be doing?

– Is this, what I’m doing right now, productive?

And then I start to think into the future about what will be most productive …

I have to remind myself, that is not the game we are playing.

Stay here. Stay present.

It strikes me how easily I forget. I have an ill feeling, and then I am distracted, and then I forget.

Even control over my body seems to be something I could part ways with, other than for the convenience of my fingers which hold this pen to write.

Things occur to me as being beautiful, and in that moment of occurrence, nothing else matters. My senses are fully immersed in the beauty, like the sight of a crumbling tree trunk, split open and filled with forest debris. So dead, but so perfectly at home.

I think, how will these words sound to the others who read them?

I remind myself, it does not matter. Stay here. Stay present.

Of all the bugs, mosquitoes are the only ones I swat. I do not so much mind the prick and the drawing of blood. I am more worried about disease.

This idea of disease, planted in me by society, affects my behavior towards other living creatures. Again, I think of reading Ishmael.

I cough to spit. It surprises me that I have a throat and a mouth.

I am so at home in the woods right now. The wind blows through my hair, just like it does through the leaves in the trees.

I hear something behind me, a rustle in the leaves. I feel the desire to make myself unseen, to crouch low, to hide.

I feel that I understand my ancient ancestors in this moment. At the same time, I feel the call back to civilization.

I think of my friends and the house, and I smile.

I am surprised to feel my facial muscles smiling.

As the sun shines and the birds chirp, I am filled with so much love for nature.

A moment ago, it was dark. The clouds covered the sun. I was scared of what I could not see among the trees. I was alone.

I am resistant to going back, to have to talk.

I know it will be hard to stay out here for too long. I do not know the ways of the woods. I would lose. I do not want to lose, and so starts the civilization of man.

I was born civilized. At this point, it would take much undoing.

I see a runner on the street through the woods. It invokes a feeling of familiarity.

From where I stand writing in the woods, I feel perfectly balanced between far away from, and still close by, to civilization.

If I were farther into the woods alone, I might feel a more primal fear for my survival.

As I see things on the forest floor, I lean down with my paper and pen, like a photographer with a camera.

I hear trucks on the road. I remember what people have told me in the past.

I just feel so happy, particularly to be inside of my body.

To be contained in a physical being, capable of realizing thought.

The body is a beautiful thing. More than just the beauty of its form, but also of its function—to realize thoughts and feelings.

The importance of yoga, to cultivate this connection between body and mind, occurs to me now.

It is a practice I could spend my whole lifetime learning.

In contrast, I am less interested in certain aspects of my job. There are aspects that seem far removed from man’s natural state. Like keeping the body seated in the same desk chair all day.

Woah! A mother moose and a child moose just passed, not more than forty feet from where I am standing here in the woods.

At first, I felt immense fear. I could not tell what was near me in the woods, other than that it was big—bigger than a bird or a chipmunk.

Your eyes play tricks on you between the branches in the trees.

I am being bitten by mosquitoes. I choose to return to civilization, knowing the risks.

I am sad to leave. I must remember the connectedness to nature that I experienced here.

I hear my friends and their words. I cannot speak to them. They must come out here into the woods and experience it for themselves.

All around me, the forest floor is alive, mostly with ants. There are also mosquitoes, flying and landing.

There are many aspects. You do not need to fear that it will be over. It will continue. Whether your ego is involved, does not matter. You are a part of it all.

But these mosquitoes are insufferable!

I feel a drop of rain—another element forcing me to return.

My friends talk too much.

They do not wait in silence long enough to experience it themselves.

I look back at Marie, I think to talk to her as Marie—she, of the flesh and blood, with whom I share memories.

But she is not the same, as she appears to me now. She is participating in the One. She is a soul, and that’s all that matters.

I think of my own flesh. Am I housed in the bones I would choose? What does it matter, if we’re all the same.

These words are so meager. What art form then? What form could capture this most fully?

There is the question, first, of what art form could capture a lived experience most fully. Then, there is the question of what art form could capture THIS (tripping) most fully.

It occurs to me now that the “come up” has passed. We have arrived at the plateau.

I am not sure if any of the others would be willing to participate in this experience in the way that I participate in it.

The woods are a very clear analogy. Deeper in the woods, there is only the sound of wind in the leaves. The only movements are the ants on the ground.

Back at the house, there is music from man-made speakers, man-made words, and even man-made men.

These man-made men are the ones who do not understand.

I think of Ishmael again.

We come from nature, that is where we will find ourselves in order.

Man does not understand himself. Not even the accumulated knowledge of generations of man thinkers can understand one single man.

How then, can we expect man to build himself?

He cannot do the job of nature.

It occurs to me now, how brilliant the book Ishmael really is.

Even as I write these words, I realize that going back to read them will not be the same.

Impossible to achieve the same understanding.

I am aware of the ground being alive with ants. I cannot look anywhere on the ground where I do not see an ant.

These ants are like men—successful, relative to other species, and still working to further themselves.

The operations of nature make sense to me in terms of business. An enterprising species will take market share from others and win.

I almost caught a look of myself reflecting in the window, blue bandana. I looked away, not wanting to see my face.

Talking aloud to Marta, my voice sounds inadequate. I wish it were more musical.

You have to have your art form ready, before the experience.

When you are awash in the storm of your emotions, there must already be an artistic channel, into which that emotion might pour.

Without a specified channel, the emotion will search for one.

I am an emotional person, I realize now. I always have been. This emotion is my power. It fuels my actions.

If I allow it, the economy will engulf me here where I stand in this moment with the skills I have to offer, and my hopes and dreams to be used as motivators to put my skills to work.

The economy does not care where I land. It does not care what profession I choose. It will get use out of me, one way or another. This is management, the business of getting use out of people. And the managers report to investors, and so on.

This is the nature of the economy—investors pushing people to do things (who then push other people to do things) to make more money. It is the investor’s passion for more that sets the whole economy in motion.

Ants

Today I’ve watched ants. They have crawled on the wooden boards of the deck and on the stone patio beneath the deck. Some have even made their way into the house—much to the chagrin of our host. One ant carried a dead ant, equal in size to the live ant. Another ant carried a dead bug of another species. The dead bug was three or four times the size of the ant. I could not identify the dead bug; a beetle, maybe. Its body was mangled. Last night I made a comment, “If ants were in charge of a country, that country would take over the world.” I continue to swat at mosquitoes; they carry disease and aim to drink my blood. They bring the violence upon themselves. The ants are peaceful, going about their business. They will climb up and over my leg if that is the most direct path to where they are going. I don’t mind. I like to see them up close. I admire their hard work.

Park photographers

I watched two
Photographers
At the park today
As they
Took pictures
Of the birds
And the sky

One of them
With the long lens
Stood in the shade
Resting his camera
On his leg
Like a hunter
Holding his gun
Lazy like
Waiting to shoot
A bird in the trees

He waited like this
Still as a cat
In the shade
Only moving
His other arm
Not holding the camera
To take drags
On his cigarette

The second
With a small camera
Stood in the trail
In everyone’s way
Looking up at the sky
At a trail of smoke
Left by a plane

All of the passersby
Stood for a second
And tried to see
What the camera man
Was seeing

He pointed and explained
But some just didn’t see
Or understand
What was the big deal
About a trail of smoke
In the sky

Tree and sun

Laying down
At the base of a tree
Looking up
Through the branches
At the sun

It is a tall tree
With many branch layers
So only some sections
Of light
Reach the grass
In between
Splotches of shade

The sun twinkles
As the leaves blow
And shift in the wind

I have to shield my eyes
With my hand
When the leaves blow
Just right
To let the sun
Shine through

Tree branch lovers

I see a point

In the tree

Where two branches

Cross over

And I wonder

If either branch

Longed for the other

Before they crossed

And if they now

Miss each other

Growing

In their own directions

I walked to the park today

I walked to the park after work today. I walked down California Street until I reached the avenues in the Richmond and then I turned north on Sixth Avenue until I got to the park.

It was sunny, but not too sunny. It seemed like the sun was farther away, sending its heat from a distance, so it wasn’t too hot. I almost wished it was hotter. When I walked through a part of shade under a tree or on the side of a building and a breeze would blow at the same time, I was almost cold.

The sky was blue. It was the same blue across the whole sky, except near the sun where it was white. I got to the park and walked out to a clearing in between the trees. There were other people around. Some dogs and some small children.

I watched one little girl squat down and cry. She seemed to be about a year old. Her mother (or at least I presume it was her mother) stood there and waited patiently for her to finish crying.

There were dogs on leashes with their owners. There were people seated on the grass having a picnic or just talking. I sat down on the grass and talked to my dad on the phone. We talked about making decisions and how that’s part of life. He told me his perspective and I thanked him.

It is ironic that I realize as I get older the value of wisdom from those who are even older than me. Perhaps it is because I am getting older and will want people to ask me for my wisdom someday. Perhaps it is because I am getting wiser as I am getting older, and it is part of being wiser to realize that it is wise to seek wisdom from others who are older.

After my call with my dad I walked deeper into the trees. I found an area of level ground and did push-ups. I started with twenty normal push-ups. Then I stood up and took a short break and walked in circles. Then I did twenty push-ups with my hands in the shape of a diamond. And I stood up and walked in circles again. I did other variations of push-ups until I was tired.

I was relaxing and thinking of whether I should walk deeper in the park. Then I realized I was late for dinner. My girlfriend said she was going to put the salmon in the oven. That was probably over an hour ago, I thought. So I went back.

I was late. My salmon was cold and dry. But the broccoli was still warm. I ate and then took a shower. Now I’m sitting on the side of the tub in my towel writing this.

Shy sun

Hiding below the horizon

Like a shy child

Who forgets every night

That he is the sun god

And must muster again

The courage needed

To shine all day

For the world to see

Bird bath bar

A bird chirping

In the middle of the night

Singing her heart out

Must be drunk

Coming home

From the bird bath bar

Not to see

It’s pitch black out

And time to sleep

And save the chirping

For the morning

Searching for my muse

I woke up early today to find my muse. It is almost summer so the light was up before me, peeking in between the drapes. I got out of bed and rolled the rug away to make space for my mat. I did my stretches and put on the clothes and pack that I had set out the night before. I opened the door and locked it behind me and stepped onto the sidewalk outside to find the peace and quiet of the morning.

I walked on a street with shops. I walked in a forest. I walked across the bridge. After almost four hours of walking, I began to despair. My muse had been missing for some time. All this past week she has been missing, and I had only caught glimpses of her a few of the weeks before.

I stopped overlooking the ocean. I took a drink of water and ate one of the bars I had packed in my bag. I walked to the beach. It was still foggy and the beach was not too inviting. But I was tired and wanted to lie down. I did, and after finding a comfortable position in the sand, fell asleep.

When I woke, the sun was shining. The clouds had separated for the sun to shine through. It was then that I found my muse. I searched in my pack for my phone and began to write. I wrote some poems and then I wrote this.

My muse will have to go again soon. I have become used to this, her coming and going. But I am grateful to have found her. And will be grateful to search for her again.

Beach bum

What moves me

Other than belly

And bladder

Tugging at my mind

Telling my body

It’s okay to stay

And lay out

On the beach

All day

Sun god

After fog and cold

All morning

The sun breaks through

Cloud cherubs

That flee

Feigning fear

Of a sun god

Now known to be

Quite benign

Blue

It’s a blue day

Out by the water

As the clouds move away

And the line between

Ocean and sky

Melts into

The same blue

Domestic branch

In the morning

I found

A tree branch

Had grabbed hold

Of the open

Window’s frame

As if to make its way

Inside

And out of the wind

Run to write

I run to the park

To pick a poem

Like a leaf

From a low-hanging

Tree branch

Or a lyric

From a bird’s song

And then run home

To write it down

Don’t worry wind

Edited:

I wish the wind
Wouldn’t worry

For the leaves will surely
Shake themselves

Free 
From their branches

Before the fall
Is over

Original:

I wish the wind
Wouldn’t worry

For the leaves
Will surely
Shake themselves

Free from branches
‘Fore the fall
Is over

grass track

Out on the lawn

I run in a track

Made by the mower

Between yellow lines

Four feet apart

Where the wheels

Killed the green grass

in the park

I can still hear

The birds chirp

In the park

A baseball

In the grass

As the sun sets

On the skyline

Easier here

To worry less

About the woes

I ran from

branches in the rain

Branches bend

Burdened by rain

Their leaves

Dancing in the wind

Dodging drops

Dripping down

From leaves

Already laden

On branches above

hopes of spring

Outside our window

Stretch branches

Bare for months

When we too

Under duress of winter

Couldn’t stand

To sustain much more

Than ourselves

Now blossoming

Bits of green granting

To my bed laying head

Hopes of spring

To get out again

And grow strong

cars in a storm

Outside

Under eyes

Of soft storm

Slick tires

Skate across

Wet road

Wafting wind

Carried

Car noise

Shooting by

Slip

Sliding along

Go on then

Do you see

These same things

That I see

Anymore

Simple as sure

No more words

Than three

To a line

Are needed

To describe

Something

So simple as sure

That I wonder

If you see

Anymore

Walking swiftly

You must have

Somewhere to be

Whither where

You might ask me

Don’t you see

Where I’m going

Pointing somewhere

Far away

I nod my head

And bow

To pick at the grass blades

Beneath my bare feet

Simple

That simple man song

Keeps ringing in my ears

From Skynyrd and Thoreau

Louder than city buses

And conversations

In the apartment next door

I hear the simple silence

Louder than the city noise

Whispering to me

Up reading alone at night

Or deep into a hike

What if not to be

Is Shakespeare’s answer

And all of this

Has become too much

Watching weather patterns

If only watching

Weather patterns

Carry cloud wisps

Away carelessly

Unbeknownst

To eyes without

Patience to watch

One point

Long enough to notice

That the clouds

Are actually moving

Albeit slowly

As eyes accustomed

To fast things

Will surely miss

While beach laying

In an effort

To slow down

Buried alive

I lie on a pebble beach

Arms outstretched

Grabbing fistfuls of pebbles

And covering my chest

In vain, as I breathe

And my chest expands

The pebbles fall off

To either side

Thinking hole

At the beach

With my friends

I went away

On my own

Over to the cove

And found

A little laying spot

And so I laid

Until I got caught

In a thinking hole

Then I came back

For my friends

To help me find

My lost mind

Blue sky

Laying on my back

On a hilltop

In the Marin headlands

I focus on my eyelids

With my eyes closed

Squinting to vary

The abstract shades

Of blue I see

Choppy waters

Out in the ocean

I can see

From the hilltop

The water is drawn

With white lines

On a windy day

Not so glassy calm

As most mornings

I’ve climbed atop

This here hill

Hippie surfers

They’ll all find some day

Found things lost time ago

Take a cycle to repeat

Trending up and down

Rearing their headed crest

Above the horizon

So the mainstream can see

And all behind is hidden

When the surfers swam out

Far enough beyond

The crest headed wave

Will have the ocean

Dark blue and deep sky

All to themselves

Until that wave crest crashes

Where the mainstream can see

And a few more will venture out

beautiful sunset

a beautiful sky

passed through

all colors

of the unspeakable palette

unwriteable red

right there

on the window

phosphorescent

between white clouds

and unseen upward

blue sky

that meld in the middle

neon orange

yellow in the center

glowing

gets me

shimmering golden

like it can’t be

at a time

when i am most glad

not to be blind

 

cut at odd

perfect angles

by cloud coverage

 

red ready

to wage light war

on the white

purple battleground

 

some turquoise even

i think it’s turquoise

made by what two colors

i don’t know

 

like a life giving light

all colors i swear

that i’ve ever seen

dome sky

above the clouds

the sky

opens upward

like a dome

large enough

to see only one side

and no top

but a dome

certainly

for the fact that i

can look all around

and up

and still see

walking in the rain

stopping under

a stranger’s roof

in the rain writing

needing to get home

but cannot

get more

than a half block

without a drop

of rain poetry

falling

on my head

walking in the rain

leaning

with my shoulder

against the brick wall

in the rain

typing

on my phone

drops collecting

on the scene

blurring

the words

so i cannot read

what i’ve typed

walking in the rain

walking

as i normally do

slowly

and looking around

as it starts to rain

and i must speed up

if i hope

to reach home

dry enough

to go indoors

without undressing

sidewalk fog

walking on

the same sidewalk

as this morning

when everything

was completely covered

in fog

now midday

and bright out

i can see the sights

i missed

this morning

walking on divis

walking north

on divisadero

in the morning

once i climb

to the top

of the hill

and reach broadway

that is when

i first see

the ocean

out in front of me

and then

a little further

downhill

to vallejo

is when i can see

presidio forest

to my left

and i start

to feel better

walking to heal my anxiety

walking is healthy for me when i have anxiety. just to get out and see some new spaces and get exercise without too much risk or danger. the longer the walk the better, getting into a sort of meditative state just focusing on putting one foot in front of the other. especially if i can walk from inland out to the coast to see the water and horizon, reminding me there is more and i am small and it’s alright.

soft hills

from a distance

the hills look soft

until the hike

takes you there

in the thick of it

slipping on

jagged rocks

stepping over

spiny brush

passing by

things are passive

before you know

passing by

eyes unprepared

to appreciate

a sight gone by

this mountain sky

laying here

in the lawn

fingers laced

behind my head

just watching

what passes

less names in nature

there are more

things with names

walking down

the city street

than there are

walking on a trail

in the woods

—or at least more

of the names

that i know

—being that i know

the makes

and models of cars

and names for

certain types of people

better than

the species of trees

or types of stone

—so when in the city

i can say about

the businessman

and the BMW

or the gas prices

at $3.95

but in the forest

i can only say

there are trees,

rivers and rocks

and lots of them

car window rain

water droplets

on the outside

of the car window

making a light

pitter patter

each

its own shape

some thin

and long

others small

and circular

each growing larger

as another

lands on top

gaining

enough weight

to slide

slightly down

like a snowball

absorbing mass

from other droplets

on the descent

streaking

faster

until joining

the fallen ‘fore

in a small stream

at the base

of the window

in the absence

only so much

to write about

in the absence out here

quiet

and mostly

staying the same

other than

trees growing

and clouds moving

surely

but so slowly

imperceptibly

nature taking its time

refusing demands

of the human world

to grow faster

unnaturally

needing

an occasional trip

like this

to step off

the giant wheel

that spins

faster than most

thought it would

big sky

they call this place

big sky

i know now

on the back deck

in a rocking chair

looking out

at the expanse

covered in complete

white cloud

without obstruction

other than

the pine trees

that form

the bottom border

of the big sky

water drops

water drops

along the bottom edge

of the wood railing

forty or fifty

along the length

each holding on

out of the corner of my eye

one drops

to splash

on the already wet deck

glancing back

and forth

along the length

trying to catch the moment

when a drop becomes

big and sagging

near the end

and loses its grip

raining outside

raining outside

of the window

ripples

in each puddle

interrupted

by the ripples

of new drops

at some points

of the roof

where the flow

is frequent

there are streams

falling

from the shingle ends

at others points

there are

less frequent drops

making noise

muted

by the window glass

all this from montana (09/20/19)

knowing me on a misty morning like this in big sky Montana looking out from the deck seeing my breath the same color as the clouds the nestle down into the cleavage of the mountains like a woman’s necklaceThe soft and frequent pitter patter of rain that drops on my phone screen and the wet wood will become more frequent and harder later in the day the weather report tells us which is why we walking up early to make the drive to Yellowstone

I knows breeze in cold air in my mouth exhales vapor why I see the same trees this all last night now presumably just a little taller and a little more wet from the night rain chopped firewood place stacked at the mouth of the forest quite a lot of firewood next to two stops that must’ve been the contributors onetreeMust’ve been about twice as thick as the other judging from the chopped wood in the stumps some trees fall and naturally I wonder why those were not first used for the firewood seems like a good alternative to use a dead day instead of shopping at a living thing

on after and into what wouldn’t have been possible prior to what presently is more poignant than trying to remember

It is most often between generics and specifics choosing whether to lift off and leave earth or stay grounded in a real and present reality. The difference between being that with specifics you are committed. There is a time and place and to say one thing starts you down that path so that if you say something completely different halfway through then the reader will say wait a minute, this is not what I expected. Whereas with generics there are mostly pronouns and non-descript adjectives (the types of adjectives that could describe anything).

inward skies drift outward from mind’s eye into What was once water in the lake below now drifted up into vapor from the water surface that reflects it moving on drifting so this sky is a change of sceneThe same clouds that hide the stars at night giving a sense of soft safe protection aboveAround mountain peaks in the distance soon to return earth word in this rain

Inside painting cloud so I’d like a canvas three jobs against it clearly moving just enough to know it’s still real

edited: Inside a painting on the back porch clouds so white like a canvas the trees against it the green trunk spine branched tops defined so clearly against sky moving just enough to know it’s still real compared to trees against the forest so ambiguous seeing a forest for the trees wrapped in a blanket internally warm enough so my breath turns immediately to vapor making it harder to see through the smoke into the painting

unable to tell whether the clouds have changed or not being the same white overhead and no city noise to tell you when people are getting to or leaving work and your hunger the only clock telling you the time since your last meal and maybe tired at some point in the day napping if so in the leather sofa under the vaulted cedar ceiling waking and need needing to or at least laying my head back down and keeping my eyes open thinking as little as possible letting what happen will in the world outside this montana cabin off far away from what i will soon return to

all this from montana (09/19/19)

how to have an experience with water flooring for the white waterfall in between being here and closing my eyes and folded my hands sitting on the rock next to the river or looking up eyes open thinking trying to speak about it this caused a conflict between being realizing realizing to matter now do you talk more specifically like the clusters of white bubbles created by the base of the waterfall that float down the river over and between rocks protruding above the surface easily seen as the water is so clear and broken temper falling into the river poking out of the water lead up against the Rockwall creating a bridge tears of stone face showing years of the riverCutting through the college drone of the water creating a nice background so I can barely hear the edges of my voice just the water going down the right hitting each tear and tell hitting the water in the white

The world rewards persistence Neil says referring to the river cutting through the rocks creating the waterfall right now see it says give something enough time and it will have an impact I think the myself that’s a tragedy of it that we only have so much time

feeling with fingertips plant leaves reaching for the side of the trail here in the crunch of gravel under sneakers my friends carrying on conversations in twos six of us total three sets of two is that with the width of the trail will allow here in the waterfall still has a distance behind us one story takes over everyone listen to the laughs

The trail Narrows now conversations trail off the width only allowing one at a time so you have to turn around to talk to the person behind you so naturally talking last and looking around and keeping to ourselves more

Only so much you could write about the woods with words needing colors to get around the edges of each individual rock or each fine Pineneedle on the trail of varying length a word we’re just say rock or Pineneedle and less mathematically down on hands and knees measuring and describing to the decimal point each size a painting send all these numbers automatically to the eyes so a meditative exercise conjuring up general words to describe a pleasant for scene as if to just repeat the word tree tree tree leaves leaves leaves brock brock brock rock is what I meant to say and these doing the job of words to country up memories of your own nature scenes

creating making more being in what you are see you can see here feel remembering like this before wondering if it is the same and if New how knew where? At the edges? Just barely different? Or completely nothing ever seen before or the same using memory words taught and rememberedOr new words shouted naturally whispered maybe sounds recorded that may not fit letters

Disorienting at the edge of a cliff to look out and see and get so far into that site forgetting your own feet at the edge almost leaning forward into the picture forgetting you’re funny then to waiver and feel the wind remembering your own place and stepping backYour own body and its limitations causing the loss of the site and even more than that you saw it but that you were in it and part of it if not for your physical keeping you bodily

on a straight away sent now good golly getting into it having covered some distance heading the middle part they never seems to end on and on like try not to watch the time to get past farther faster checking stepping

you’re asking too much of your experience want to get to last longer otherwise be more when it is as overwhelms finitely as Humanizer created for Keeping the sensation of touch in your hand only as long as you hold onto what you’ve picked up when you drop it to pick up something else you can not keep what you had before the same as when you turn your head to trade one site for another or walk farther on the trail see to be somewhere else entirely so you must go and taken only what comes when it does and work hard to be taking in Nothing other than what has come

 

standing in the wind

standing

with my back

to the wind

pant legs

flapping

leaning back

just a little

hands

in my pockets

sound

wooshing by

my ears

waiting

to warm up

between gusts

stressed out leaves

green leaves

outside

the window

showing signs

of stress

blowing

on branches

flexing

in the wind

not

so calm

as it is

inside

watching

pretty sure i’ve written this before

when wonder weighs

what won’t be held

it’s hard to keep it quiet

though sudden sways

in ocean waves

and wind outside the window

make it so

that even though

breaths are held

just waiting

it all will come

from a summer’s sun

that shines so all can see

weatherman

i talked to cloud

and sun could not say

whether we are waiting on

high, risen, or setting

today

drapes like dam

window drapes

like a dam

after a flood

in the morning

holding back

all that light

wanting in

to wake up

and start the day

cars like waves

sometimes

they are smooth

like the ocean

sounds

of cars going by

so i sit

on our rug

in the apartment

as if

i was on the beach

in the morning

meditating

listening

to mechanical waves

like driftwood

before

you know it

you’re moved

like driftwood

downstream

with all

the other

debris

that moves

with the river

to the same end

regardless

of where

you started

barely sun rise

clear cold

misty morning

white white sky

seeming all to be

the same white

from a barely

risen sun

that shows some

of its light

but none

of its color

green mountainside vs. commercial roadside

cityscapes with harsh lines steel and objects versus brush and green overlapping trees with their trunks hidden and even the edges where the mountain shoulders would meet the sky dressed in greenery until you take the mountain road down and emerge into the first intersection where there is a sign with gas prices and boxy storefronts and street signs and stop lights that are all angular and pointed

vacation with baby

earlier at the beach in the waves out deep enough so baby could barely stand with her head above the water and especially had difficulty when a big wave would come and when we’d had enough and went back to shore our heads were pounding either from there being water in our ears or from the waves hitting our heads over and over so we tried to remedy the first by laying on our sides to let some of the water out but that didn’t work so we didn’t know but by then the sun had made our skin dry and warm so we forgot about our heads and fell asleep dreaming in and out with the sounds of the boys playing in the sand castle and the waves crashing a constant background noise until i slept for a while and baby woke me up saying she wanted to go so we got back in the car and drove along the pch and the traffic wasn’t too bad except for a short stretch right before we turned into toponga canyon and now we’re back in bed in the studio with a bird chirping outside and our host running the hose to water his bonsai trees and the dog trotting back and forth upstairs

lunchtime sun

sitting outside for lunch

the cold motivates me

to stand up and get going

until the sun comes out

and i sit back down

to fold my hands and smile

enjoying the warmth

saturfoggydaze

wondering whether

which trail

will wind inland

and switch

back to the beach

where we started

low fog over

headless hills

hunkered

down and into

the valley

dirt trails

like scars

where

humanity

cut into

nature

natural stone

stair steps

in the trail

that refused

to grade

in some

pleasant

purgatory

between

dirt trail

blue sky

up high enough

into the fog

white nothing

lifted off away

from it all

hiking here

wind in the thicket

green and gold hills

contrasted with white fog,

locking the world down

inside of itself,

making our steps matter

with attention,

normally drawn upward

seasonal effects

you get drilled down into who you are in the winter overcast cold dark fog and keep your head down to add to the world and build up with what stays together and the same so you can make sense and move forward though a structure can only stand still and so focused for so long before forced to change so might as well start to change it anyway by your own hot hand in the summer as a heat wave burns off the fog and lets out all that stayed locked down and into the sky letting go some that didn’t belong anyway and only spoiled by having stayed so long and pulling down other forces and stars from beyond the infinite sky and sun that mixes new moving pieces in the open blue cloudless warm until the clouds return and lock in what the summer has newly brought down and allows to focus like a pot of only certain ingredients from a whole grocery store and letting some identity and certainty be beautiful amidst a world of never-ending other interesting and beautiful moreness

quarter tab swim

on a quarter tab

laying on the beach

the ocean called me

taking off my jeans,

flannel, shirt, socks,

and shoes

there were other people

on the beach;

lots of people actually.

it was a nice day.

i took off my clothes

and walked toward the water.

tripping, not conscious

of other people

watching me.

in the water, freezing,

didn’t bother me.

out to waist high

a wave came

i dove in and

under the water

everything ceased to exist. the ego already disassociates on acid. the body can still remain lightly with a subdued awareness of the senses. under freezing water, however, that awareness is obliterated.

there is only the freezing all over. and the roar of water forever. waves crashing above like the world is falling apart.

forgetting to breathe because the art of being underwater takes precedence for my attention. even when my lungs shout, return to the surface, i cannot hear them.

the art of nature at large overwhelming my individual need to survive. it making no difference whether my body, a small part of all this, will rise to the surface and swim back to the beach, or drown here and sink and become one with the ocean that i am part of in one way alive or dead in another.

In between seasons

On a sunny afternoon in March, on a bench in South Park between second and third street in downtown San Francisco, this occurs to me. That it is never in the middle of a season that I can discern its identity. In the middle of a season it seems to be just the way things are. But in between, when two seasons are still deciding whose turn it is to play, playing tug of war, winter and spring, so that the days before this were all rainy, dark, and dreary, and the weatherman said this morning that the days after today will go back to the same. In this back and forth it is clear to see what the seasons are like. On a sunny day like today, I am open. I can see more. Like shower water, hot opens up and cold closes in. In the open hot sun, the brightness shows to me finer features that are hidden in the dark, as parts of general dark masses or concealed in ambiguous shadows. In the light it all seems open. More to take in, overwhelming almost. Also more to keep your attention outside of yourself. Whereas in the dark, like at night with your eyes closed before bed, you think inward into yourself, with lack of senses outside to keep your attention selfless. Hibernating in the winter, adding to and bolstering your ego, to warm up in the spring and let it all go in the summer.

sounds like space

sitting on the rooftop, so much around us, k says, all the cars on the road and all the people in the buildings; here it just sounds like space.

Sunshine with rain

After several sooty weeks, overcast with ash from the fires up north, it rained today and cleared away the smoke in the air that was indistinguishable from the fog in San Francisco.

During lunch I went out for a sandwich; it was still raining. I brought an umbrella and enjoyed breathing clean air. I met the rain as a bringer of good news, like I imagine it is for the farmers in a drought. It was the same to us unable to breathe because of the smoke from the fires, like I said.

Now sitting in our office chairs on the ninth floor, the sunshine is coming out. We haven’t seen sunshine in weeks, either because we leave the office too late, or the smoke has covered it, or the permanent cloud in San Francisco. Now the sunshine comes through after the rain. Thanksgiving is tomorrow. I’m excited to leave the office in a couple hours and breathe the air.

Three rivers

The input will always be there as long as you keep going. There will always be enough to come in through the windows; the key is deciding to draw the blinds at the right times. Who you are moving forward depends on what you let in and what you keep.

If I am a river, I am three: stagnant, overflowing, and dammed. The third is preferred to the second, and the second to the third.

There is so much out there, welcome it in, this is the start. Drink from ocean, fall into a sky, hold up the weight of the world. The beginning is to grab for it, invite it in. To start, you just have to do something, anything. Like a sculptor, you first have to get some clay, before you can start to shave and cut and refine down.

Next is to discern. You have got enough to start getting rid of extra. Act as a sieve. Let water and anything else that is abundant and not the finest, let it pass through. Retain only the best, and place it in the miner’s pocket. You are the miner’s pocket, where he adds his gold.

Most make the mistake of never even stepping into the river. They stay safe and secure, but stagnant and dry, on the shore. The next few, who are still better off, thrash about in the water. They grow strong from swimming every which way, even against the current. They learn a great deal from their experience. But they are directionless. The best among us learn to move with the waves, traveling far and wide with the water’s natural power at their backs.

Sunburn

I laid on the roof in the sun too long and even fell asleep, me eyes are fried like egg yolks in my scramble brain and my body floats like the burn carries it, too hot to remember, I wander in the shade like nothing here powers me. Even though the sun would have melted me apart if I stayed, the shade and the rest of the world in its muted colors seems alien to me now, I’ve thought of returning to the roof and the bright burning apart anyway.