Saturday, March 10, 2012

THE CELEBRANTS' ASANA

1.


Harmony asked her friends 
in the infinity pool if they'd heard about the woman 
on Fox who was evicted.  
"She was crazy," she said, "the sherriff refused to do it.  
It took three years. Three years! 
That's why I got voted onto the board." "That's insane," said
Meredith, shivering, 
her breasts bobbing in the healing waters. In this circle
they all spread their arms as 
if to breathe life again into that ancient Dionysian
ritual. Chloe squinted 
at the clock through the sun: "I thought that was a sundial," she 
said. "No," Diana said.
"I think it's some kind of mandala," Rachel said, she 
waded over to get 
a better look and sure enough it's both! Harmony at last. 


2.  


We're all in thick cashmere robes, barefoot polar bears leaving
the meditation lounge 
to enter the mystic mist rising from the sacred pools,
some of us holding sacred
stones in our hands, some of us toting sacred champagne in
flutes, the air is crystalline,
shudderingly cold in its sacred purity, breath-
taking cold!, but the mist
is ticklishly warm, vapors condensing to cool tingling
rivulets on our skin.
We slide free from our sacred robes and slip down into the
warm waters, our healing
Ganges, and slowly as we squint in the scintillations 
we are reborn, buoyant in
the bubbling grottoes, our limbs unraveling, we are sacred
jellyfish, bodies blooming
in the tender aqueousness, limp, our faces staring
up through the sacred steam,
praying for the sun to burn through the mist, so elemental,
the screes from the eagles
circling somewhere overhead in the sacred blue, soaring
in that infinity pool
beyond this sacred spring nestled in the hallowed pines. 


3.


Oh it's all hens and drakes here at the spa, lovely barelegged
women sleeping in the
sacred cabana chairs, their rivers of hair swept in towels 
and drinking cucumber
water, exhilarating in their exfoliated 
radiance, the men still 
sandaled and robed, their minds rubbed free of any any earthly
desire beyond the sacred
song of flesh itself, sated and staring not at the
glowing legs and arms, but
at the sacred ring of fire, sacred flames rising from stone,
staring in a strange 
philosophical mood they've rarely known, no penetrating
words or concepts here, just
a hint of some dignity, a loneliness of some sacred
source, not fear, not lust, but
some ineffable something, something slippery, something they 
cannot return to again.


4.  


Each of us here in this astral plane, this way station,
is suffering. That's what
the Buddhists say, so here, among the men staring into the
emptiness and the women 
floating on the sun's unconsciousness, we're suffering
while just beyond the wall 
we hear the grackles' cold cries, plaintive, the agony 
of being cast here, orphans,
unfulfilled in the sun, their black and purple fate awaiting them,
our fate shared in these 
vessels. these bodies always wanting, wanting, something we
will never know, praying
in sacred chants, sacred aches, there is no relief from 
this being, this wanting, this
incessant insistence, this persistent urge to know
what we will never know.



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