Tonight
the tip of my pen
has become
a fish hook
pulling toward me
my last supper.
You see...
last night
I heard
another call
from the desert.
I was hesitant to go.
I stepped lightly
toward the void
for I knew
whatever is said out there
means change.
The frosty chill on my neck
nearly caused me
to turn back,
but the promise of fire
and a chance
to gaze
once again
into the eyes of my teacher
drove me forward.
She has been a Diamond-Cutter.
I have been a raw diamond
destined for an ego-cutting knife hilt.
As I journeyed
through the darkness,
I realized
qawwali songs were guiding me.
Ecstatic.
Mourning.
Longing.
Welcoming.
Somehow stitched to my DNA.
I arrived and saw that my teacher was not alone.
A man
in a cobalt turban,
and a shawl as white as snow,
smiled.
Somehow familiar, he gave me wine.
Symbols and sigils
of every tradition
were tattooed into his skin.
They glowed.
He glowed.
The fire glowed.
I had the sense
he was just in
from a long trek.
I had the sense
I was about to go
on a long trek myself.
He told me he would be like a rock;
that it was time
to learn
the refined art
of making life
a work of art.
He pointed East
and said: "Remember!"
You never
come back
from the desert
the same.
___________________________
from Agape: Poems from the Desert of the Mind
(c) 2008 - 2009 / Frank Owen
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