Wisdom of Thumbs and Soil

A poem celebrating the knowledge that comes with age and experience of the world, and ancient wisdom.

2005 Powwow

2005 Powwow (Photo credit: Smithsonian Institution)

Wisdom Of Thumbs And Soil

 

Our elders walk in the way of the wise,
they know but wait to be asked
questions by those who have
forgotten their thumbs. The young
cannot sign, are left to wander in
cold wearing the skirts of summer, their
feet frozen in January snows, blue toes
poking through sandals, eyes not yet
mirrors of what and who has passed.

 

Zulu woman making pot at reconstructed traditi...

Zulu woman making pot at reconstructed traditional village, South Africa (Photo credit: gbaku)

Our elders are skilled in the craft
of beads and skins, knives curving
along the hides, knuckles curved
white under the tension of the leather,
fingertips delicate as they knot threads

 

to bind beads to a silken cord.  

 

Withering hands spin in the shadow
of grief, as the mind grows and the body fades.
Those who begin to question hear
the dead whispering stories in the roots
of trees. Those coming after will
rest among the roots of ancestors,
will take from the soil knowledge of
seed and root and branch. This tree
bears the seed of all trees yet to come,
as it was born of all trees that
have come before.  

 

Tree

Tree (Photo credit: blmiers2)

Carol A. Stephen
October 14, 2011

 

some of the phrases in this poem based
on Stephen Jenkinson’s Orphan Wisdom teachings

 

No-Comfort Zone Challenge Week ending July 15

So for this week, the effort was to concentrate on healthy behaviours, and for the most part I saw some progress. Yay!  No chocolate (except for one cupcake last night at a 60th birthday party for a friend, poet and musician and museum guy and editor and…Monty Reid. Congrats Monty!)  Oh, and one very small sample of a chocolate ginger pear riesling sauce. Yum. Purchased a jar, but have not opened it. I’ve monitored the BS and the BP numbers almost every day, only missed Thursday. Added veggies and some salad type things, and no dessert yesterday when I had lunch out with friends.

And I tried the “coffee on the deck in the mornings” thing, but my Siamese cat, Tojo, (that’s a soft j, sort of like Tozho)  was making too much noise with his operatic efforts. Now that the weather is good (i.e. not winter), he wants  to go for walks all the time, even in the heat. He isn’t allowed to go off on his own, and I am not interested in walking hours and hours. Walking a cat isn’t like walking a dog, either. Lots of stopping. Lots of getting the leash tangled. Lots of grass eating, followed by the inevitable regurgitation (yuck!) I keep thinking that if I don’t let him go out in early spring, he will forget about it. But my brother got there first this year so it’s too late. Besides, I feel bad that he lost his best buddy Scooter last fall. He’s never been the only cat before. Anyway, for the upcoming week, I think a healthy focus again. And praying for rain. No rain in a month, just heat and more heat. Most of the lawns are completely turned to straw.

On the poetry front, I have done my first and second draft of the poem due soon for The Light Ekphrastic, and submitted my Geist Erasure Poetry Contest entry. That had been languishing for several months since I had created  it when the contest was first announced.  (Can’t really say I “wrote” it, since it is an erasure piece.)

Poetry Friday: Emari DiGiorgio, 2012 Festival Poet

There is an interesting post over on the Dodge Poetry Festival site about poet Emari DiGiorgio that I wanted to share. Well worth a read for the poem excerpt and the way in which she melds into it a list of …. well, see for yourself!  And check out her own page link if you want to see more of her work.

Poetry Friday: Emari DiGiorgio, 2012 Festival Poet.

English: One of several temporary tents set in...

One of several temporary tents set in place for poetry readings at Waterloo Village, New Jersey for the 12th Biennial Geraldine R. Dodge Foundation Poetry Festival (25-28 September 2008) (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

A poem for Friday the 13th

No, today is not my birthday, but I did write this for my birthday back in April.

Circling Friday the 13th date on calendar with...

(Photo credit: Wikipedia)

13 is Not My Unlucky Number

You say Friday the 13th and spooky
in the same sentence. You say unlucky.
I say Friday the 13th and birthday.
Being born on the 13th day has its own burdens.

To see ill luck upon my special day
would be an unlucky omen, oxymoron.
Bad luck cancelling good? Imagine
what kind of birthday wishes I might
choose, blowing out candles in an ill wind.

I always counter the bad luck quotes.
My lucky number is often 13.

Carol A. Stephen