Wednesday, November 27, 2013

A Poem of Thanksgiving


Inspired by elder Gerry Oleman
of the Coast Salish People of British Columbia
during his welcoming remarks at the 9th Annual Imago Conference in Vancouver, BC, 2012

Long before us
 skies
    sun and moon
     oceans
         deserts
forests
                              meadows
                                 mountains.                                                          
Long before us
eagle
       and all that lived beneath her.
Long before us
               rain tapping on the beetle’s back.
Long before us
reflections in pools of quiet creeks
flowing and frozen,
   reflections of overhanging trees,
the movement of light on berries,
the faces of buck, doe and fawn,
               raccoon, wolf, cougar,
                      ovenbird rocking on twig,
the tightening of night’s grasp
       on trunks and rocks.
But no images
               of  human face
                       not one
not in puddle or pond
          not in the hand mirrors of ice-clad leaves,
               not even in the eye of predator or prey.
Long before us
      beings of all kinds
            writing their exquisite
and desperate
      life stories
on pages of earth, air, water, bark and stone,
leaving behind few traces
-- faint echoes broken by wind.
Not for us the great awakening of life
but each life for itself
and the shimmering whole
and the joy and sadness
of The Mother and Father of All Things.
The Mother and Father of All Things
who through their
restless risky dance
     made the universe
                          from a solitary seed
-the seed of all seeds
all beings
all things.

We are here now.
And though we strut about
proud parrots,
we are small,
         late-comers to the festival.
We still don’t know the dances.
If we are honest
we must wonder
if The Mother and Father of All Things
for a single moment
in the reckless ecstasy of creativity
imagined
we would become so discontent
with the abundant gardens They provided,
would set out
to live
not just outside them
                              but
       everywhere
with such fiery intention
our success was assured.
Did Mother and Father,
having birthed all things
in the reckless ecstasy of creativity         
from the seed of all seeds,
pause
     even for a moment
to imagine
that one day
their favored principle
of hunter and hunted
would run amok in us,
that we would
discard and devour
               so much of the earth
and hound so many species
as well as our own mothers, fathers
               brothers, sisters
               sons and daughters
into a Great Vanishing?

With such history behind and within us,
how is it that Mother and Father
still let us live
let us struggle to find our way
               toward redemption?
Are They simply indulgent weavers who cannot discard
a deeply flawed blanket
whose dark designs they have come to love?
Or are They truly possessed
of  a compassion beyond our comprehension?

At this moment
life is ours.
Let us set our feet on the path
with prayers
of thanksgiving.
Let us say, “Thank you!”
to Mother and Father.
Let us say, “Thank you!”
to all They put here before us
that led to now,
“Thank you!” to all that is,
“Thank you!” to all that will be.
For fourteen billion years
we
    were
not
                                     yet.
Mother and Father birthed the universe
without a hand from us,
worked out its drama
through cold and hot fury,
barrenness, solitude, roar and silence,
then
gave us
     the chance to wriggle
from long-ripening wombs.
Why us? 
Why was each of us born and not others?
Why did we make adulthood and not others?
How can we show our gratitude and worthiness
for such a chancy investment?
Let us offer still more thanks.
Let us give thanks
to The Mother and Father of All Things
 for having
the wild, foolish, restless impulse to choose
us
and not brother sperm
               or sister ova.
Let us thank the earth They made
which has given rise to all we draw upon
               for sustenance and succor
--to the waters we use
to grow and cook,
slake our thirst,
 clean our bodies,
          frolic and fish;
 to the soil that gives rise to plants
that give us sweet air to breathe,
 plants we eat,
 plants we use to weave, build, warm,
trap, hunt, play  and heal;
Let us give thanks
to all the beings
         from the tiniest we cannot see
to the largest
whose flesh, bones, sinews and skins
we have taken
with ecstasy and sadness
for we know they were not made for us
but for themselves,
for the shimmering whole
 and for Mother and Father
in their incomprehensible creative fervor.

Let us give thanks to the long bead chain of grandmothers
who
carried and birthed other grandmothers until
our own mothers ripened and carried us
and helped us wriggle into the wild,
beautiful,
sad and terrifying
world.
To all who were present at the moment of our births
we give thanks,
the family and tribe that cared for us
in our helplessness
when we were pure
and yet
 knew nothing
and all those who caressed and patted us
               along our way to discover
               how to become human beings
how to live and love
with elegance and awkwardness
                              brilliance and ignorance
               how to sing, dance, drum, whoop, laugh,
          whisper and weep
                              together,
how to hold each other with bold affection
               and yet step back so each of us can
                              hear
                              the song of his own being.
May we raise our children
               with such right love
                   --devotion without indulgence--
               that before long
               across the many lands
               each soul is a gathering place
                              where all souls are safe.
Then may our ways
                           be fragrant as spring soil
and tasty as ripe berry juice
                                                            to Mother and Father
so They might find us worthy
     of their work and worry,
give us
lives
   that are
good
               and long
and end
     with our cheeks
 on Their chests
as we listen to Their hearts
drum
  drum
      drum
before setting out
               for the gardens
in the bright reaches
of their eyes.



C Copyright 2012 Bob Kamm, reproduction by author’s permission only.