It has been a long time since I felt like indulging in poetry – over six months. During that time, my wife Joan has died, and I have gone through some of many stages of grieving..
“How are you doing these days?” people ask.
“Just fine,” I reply. And usually I mean it. But sometimes I’m lying.
The origins of this poem, I should acknowledge, come from Alex Comfort‘s Atoll in the Mind. He contrasted the placid surface of a lagoon and a mind with the unseen predators lurking in the shadows below consciousness.
Anger
Daisies lupines and long green grass
wave and waive and weave the meadows
bright brush strokes splashed against
the sky. Savory sage bristles higher
on the drier slopes. Roots reach down
into the depths of dark. A sunless
river runs through it, silent water
seeping through millennia of limestone, its
irresistible force dissolving immoveable rock,
building pressure underfoot, until a superficial word
trips over its good wishes and artesian
spout spews forth, bitter as brine,
cold as the grave it came from.
Sorry. I didn’t mean to hurt you.
Deeper still but never still, magma
roils white-hot, beneath consciousness,
crushed down, compressed, repressed
by the overburden of convention and
stiff upper lip, waiting only for a crack
in the surface veneer to split along an abyss
to vent a volcano that sears good wishes
into blackened charcoal.
Sorry. Sometimes I’m below myself.
-- Jim Taylor, August 2020