"Art, like morality, consists of drawing the line somewhere."
--G.K. Chesterton
"The man's body is sacred and the woman's body is sacred.../Each belongs here or anywhere just as much as the well-off, just as much as you."
--Walt Whitman
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According to the Buddha, right speech is a statement that is timely, true, kind, helpful (connected to liberation), and spoken with a mind of good-will. Let us all try to observe this precept.
This entry was posted on 3/30/2007 5:02 PM and is filed under Jendi's Poems.
Before the dam was built our people slept under the water and worshipped the dark bird-shadows of boat hulls which passed overhead, seen through the ripples of distance. Our crops were the weeds and growths that trailed like tears out of the sunken skulls of fish. We scarcely noticed the water weighing on our chests like a stone: how do you notice a burden that has never been lifted? Speech went nowhere, a breath released into the thick silence that bathed us and sealed us in. To communicate, we handed each other objects dropped down from boats — a spoon for kindness, a chronometer for death — the phrases the gods had set for us. After the dam was built we lay naked on our dry beds. It was so light we could not rest. We had to believe that an element we could not see was now our own. The shadows we'd learned to worship streamed from every object. Some of us bowed down to birds whose shadows flickered across the grass, some to waving clotheslines' shadowy flags, and some to clouds that passed over the whole scene, dimming our other gods to nothingness for a moment. The weight of water being lifted from our chests, we learned the terror of aspiration, as balloons soaring, knowing they may burst. And our words carried through the new spaces almost more than we could bear — released like us to travel, to die at unimagined distances.
3/30/2007 5:50 PM
Leah Gregg wrote:
This reminds me of (the infamous) Romans 1. Which issue is it going to be in? I'm awaiting an entry about shaving Jesus. I found the power dynamics very interesting. When someone in a collar denounces a very basic tenant of the church and indeed the church itself what are we to think. Reply to this
3/31/2007 12:15 PM
Hank Rodgers wrote:
This is WONDERFUL, Jendi! A lovely dream-journal of mankind's religious journey. Reply to this
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