Potencies and powers
recede over the pines;
empty pale spaces where the sky
hales back.
I fold one arm over the other,
and
my hands fall warm on either triceps.
Without thinking
I work the muscle fibers,
search for sore spots. It's my job.
Put your bare feet in my lap
and, absently, my thumbs
will burrow
for deep aches
in between the metatarsals,
while my fingers
spread them open like a book.
Read this: the history
of our kind. Sapolsky says
if a baboon is unhappy, it is because
some other baboon
is making its life a misery.
We do not think hard enough.
We do not sit down, like Shakyamuni,
and say: “why suffering?”
And why we don't sit down is easy enough:
because we already know the answer:
because we don't care enough to stop
miserabling each other. Simple as that.
The hands of the last morning clouds
open to the wind, are blown away;
the blue folds into itself,
its intention
curdles. We have not changed.
The angels
keep up their long retreat.
2 comments:
1. "Shakyamuni" is the historical Buddha, Siddartha Gautama. "Buddha" properly speaking is a generic term meaning "awakened one": there are lots of buddhas in Buddhist tradition.
2. Robert Sapolsky is a neurologist and primatologist at Stanford, the man who wrote "Why Zebras Don't Get Ulcers" and "A Primate's Memoir." Not sure where exactly he said that, and the quotation is probably inexact.
oh yes, indeed. You hit a spot there, Dale.
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