Inescapable – an essay by John Backman

 

Inescapable

Max came back last night, except this time he was orange. He used to be gray, elegant, a tabby with a big voice. Used to be, because now he’s gray and dead, even though last night he looked orange and alive.

The last time Max was alive, a veterinarian was bending over him at one end of an exam room, inserting the needle that would make him not alive. I was seated at the room’s other end. The thing to do, of course, was go stand beside him and say goodbye, but the grief seized me by the arms and pinned me to the chair. That’s the first thing I hate about grief: its grip is inescapable. Not a grip like steel, but more like deep water, like standing at the bottom of a pool, where you try to make a move but the weight of the water slows it to nothing.

* * *   

Second thing I hate about grief: it distorts your senses. Also like underwater. You hear sound above the surface but it’s too misshapen to make out the meaning. You see people doing things but they look all wavy and distorted like a screen saver.

My mother’s death plunged me underwater for several months. One Sunday, during the coffee hour after church, I watched two friends across the room, balancing cups on saucers. From their laughter, the way they held their bodies, I could tell they were having what I once called normal conversation, as if grief had never touched them. You should have joined in, someone might say. Connecting with people is so healthy when you’re grieving. Impossible. Grief restrained me from crossing the room, and even if it hadn’t, I’d never have understood what they were saying, because what they were saying wasn’t about grief and grief was all I could hear. It was, again, inescapable.

What made this ironic was the setting. We’d just finished worshiping one of history’s great escapees, who’d found a way out of death itself. If he could do that, he could have left us an escape route from grief too. But in that coffee hour, he wasn’t telling.   

* * *   

Third thing I hate about grief: you can’t reach the world, but the world can still reach you. It reached me during the week I spent in Florida to sit with my father, who was fading away. My mother had died several weeks earlier; she’d always overshadowed the silent man in our house, and with her gone I thought I’d finally get a chance to know him. He had a different idea: to follow her as soon as possible. Toward that end he ate nothing, drank nothing, said nothing. I spent the week nudging him to stay around, but in vain. The grief this time wasn’t about impending death but an opportunity lost, the last in a lifetime of them.

So when my rental car blew a tire on the way back to the airport, I exploded. I have a plane to catch, goddamn it! Thrown tire jacks, kicked fenders, the vilest words I could conjure. The way I react when the world demands speed and maturity and control and I can’t do any of it because I’m underwater.

* * *   

For a long time I thought my escape from grief lay in orange Max. As the dream went, I had nearly driven off a cliff in a safari vehicle with several people inside. One of them, while scrambling back to safety, rescued a black duffel bag from the vehicle and laid it on the ground. No one paid it much attention till the bag moved. When someone unzipped it, orange Max leapt out and began to run away. He was everything I needed: a role model of escape, the color of fire and life and hope, like the haloes on Jesus’ head in those Renaissance paintings where he marches out of the grave.

My heart fluttered as I woke up. Finally, the last word on grief. I even treated it like a last word, putting it at the end of this essay because, at the time, I believed it belonged there.

* * *   

But as it turns out, Jesus didn’t leave an escape route from grief. Quite the opposite: he may have beat death but grief got him square on the jaw. At one point he traveled to the grave of his friend Lazarus to raise him back to life. As soon as he saw the grave and the wailing mourners, he wept.

Jesus wept is the Bible’s shortest verse, too short for my questions. I need to know how he wept, a single tear down the cheek or full-on sobbing and hair tearing and ululation. I need to know how long the grief lasted: whether it magically dissipated once Lazarus was alive again, or whether it lingered because that’s what gloom does. I need to know how to do this, and once again Jesus is silent.

* * *   

Jesus may have been silent but one of his followers wasn’t—an obscure young nun who lay dying of tuberculosis, the disease that thrusts your lungs underwater. For years she’d lived what she called her “little way,” serving Jesus in life’s minutiae. One day someone asked her, “What about your ‘little life’ now?” and she answered, “My ‘little life’ is to suffer; that’s it!”

Some wisdom wants to be learned again and again. I had learned the little way years ago but apparently it wasn’t enough, because I had to learn it with Max too, gray Max, dead Max. Your little life is to grieve; that’s it. No escape given because, apparently, escape isn’t the point.

And if I can’t escape, I may as well look round. Maybe I’ve been seeing gray all wrong. Max was a handsome cat, after all, and maybe he’s shown me that gray isn’t bad, or good either, but simply there, and therefore—when the light catches it just right and you’re paying attention—beautiful.

 

#  #  #

spiritual director, nonbinary person, and quasi-hermit, John Backman writes about ancient spirituality and the unexpected ways it collides with postmodern life. This includes a book (Why Can’t We Talk? Christian Wisdom on Dialogue as a Habit of the Heart) and personal essays in Catapult, Tiferet Journal, Amethyst ReviewEvolve, Sufi Journal, and Belmont Story Reviewamong other places. John was recently named a creative nonfiction finalist in the Wild Atlantic Writing Awards.

Prayer Underneath an Elm Tree in Late Afternoon – a poem by Laura Stringfellow

Prayer Underneath an Elm Tree in Late Afternoon
 
 
At the water's edge, I count 
Cypress knees, their knobby 
arthritic bones jutting from the ground 
like ancient stalactites.
 
Under the wind, the water's surface 
looks scaled, etched, much like 
the medieval scalloped roofs 
of the stave church at Borgund. 
 
I recall last Sunday's Eucharist. On Easter, 
through the sterility of bandwidth, 
I waded through the General Confession,
Prayers of the People, and lamented 
 
an absent sacrament. The night before,
I had politely declined the priest's offer 
to collect the consecrated wafer 
for Sunday's Eucharist, choosing to 
 
keep a safe distance instead. 
Today's prayer is uncommon and wordless 
but no less weighted with meaning. 
The winds heave their intermittent sighs, 
 
and the birds blooming in the trees 
are incessant in their song. 
I slough the burden of the last months
like heavy skin, the scales 
 
collapsing in unison at my feet.
I step out and lean against the fractured elm, 
in the knowledge that the limbs above me
shall share their own unspoken grace.
 

Laura Stringfellow writes both verse and prose poetry, holds an MFA in Creative Writing, Poetry, and hails from the muggy strangelands of the Southern U.S. Her work has appeared in various literary journals and magazines, including Right Hand Pointing, Clementine Unbound, Déraciné, Neologism Poetry Journal, Coffin Bell: a journal of dark literature, Ephemeral Elegies, and The Lake. Read more of her work at laurastringfellow.com.

How to Color a Mandala – a poem by Sara Letourneau

How to Color a Mandala

Whoever said
that coloring is only for children?
When you open the book to the next empty mandala,
you may think that you’re looking at
a ring of exquisite geometry, or that you must
pick precisely the right colored pencil to start with.
If you’re not careful, the beginning
of the process may paralyze you:
thirty-something colors, just as many areas to fill,
the accuracy with which your final product should resemble
a sun, a flower, any round object that is real.
But in this moment, should is better off erased.
So banish your mind from the table
and let that quiet, confident voice speak instead.
Let it tell you the name of the first color,
the second color, and every one thereafter.
Think of this mandala as your version
of clay on a potter’s wheel, something you can mold
with your hands and instincts.
Let the core be silver or chartreuse.
Let the outermost whorls be vermillion flames
streaked with gold, or ocean waves of navy
capped with turquoise.
Create the rules as you create—
or make none at all—and allow yourself
to stray outside the lines now and then.
Breathe as patiently as the way in which
you move each utensil.
Be as lavender, sienna, or ultramarine as you wish.
Inhale the sacred smell of your paints or crayons,
and know you are illustrating the circle of life,
the most ancient circle of all.
When you’re done, tap the shoulder
of your seven-year-old self and show them
your masterpiece, then tell your adult friends
that whoever said that coloring is only for children
should try it for themselves.

.

Sara Letourneau is a poet, freelance book editor, and writing coach. Her poems are forthcoming in or have appeared in Constellations, Mass Poetry’s Poem of the Moment, Boston Small Press and Poetry Scene, The Aurorean, and Soul-Lit, among others. You can learn more about working with Sara at https://heartofthestoryeditorial.com/ and read more of her poetry at https://saraletourneauwriter.com.

Blessing – a poem by John Muro

 
Blessing
 
 
Gold-staggering flesh exposed
Beneath the tattered bark
Of a misshapen birch;
Little else the woodland offers;
Snow and shadow closing-
In amid the bleeding dark,
And this cold, futile search
For greener things falters
And prospects become less sure. 
 
Good to feel the explosions,
Though, of soft-knuckled flakes,
Of wind lifting in search
Of thick-needled conifers –
Setting in circular motion
Feathered branches caked
With ice; then, the crashing
Torrent, a prayer answered
Incense of resin rising from altar.
 
 
 

A life-long resident of Connecticut, John Muro is a graduate of Trinity College. He has also earned advanced degrees from Wesleyan University and the University of Connecticut. His professional career has been dedicated to environmental stewardship and conservation, and he has held several executive and volunteer positions in those fields. Over the past year, John has had the good fortune to dedicate more time to his life-long passion for poetry. His first volume of poems, In the Lilac Hour, was published by Antrim House in October of 2020 and is available on Amazon. His work has also recently appeared or will soon appear in Amethyst ReviewFirst Literary Review-East, Plum Tree Tavern, Freshwater and elsewhere. 

Pictures – a poem by Francis Fernandes

Pictures

Mother on her knees planting bulbs
in the flower bed and father
secluded in his study upstairs
perfecting tax returns: this is what
I see so many years later, as I drift
between the kitchen where I wash
a few dishes at a time,
and the living room where all
sorts of things are happening.
Don't ask me to supply
the details. I'm steeped in them
as it is, what with this stay at home
business putting on hold all surges
of motion in the brimming world
while yielding and framing
these simple scenes of diligence
and devotion. My own tax picture
looks bleak and I know next to
nothing about flowers, but there's
a poem in my mind that does not
have the words Girl With a Pearl 
Earring or The Potato Eaters
and it goes on like a patient Bach
fugue, branching off into the dark
and back into the light
again, and trying not to forget
the main theme.

Francis Fernandes grew up in the US and Canada. He studied in Montréal and has a degree in Mathematics. His work has appeared or is forthcoming in The Zodiac Review, Beyond Words, What Rough Beast, Third Wednesday, Poetry Potion, Montréal Writes, Underwood, Bywords, Enclave. He lives in Frankfurt, Germany, where he writes and teaches.

In The Woods – a poem by Beth Brooke

In The Woods

The wood holds a ruin:
vestigial altar, and a remnant of wall
faith built centuries ago.

Beech trees roof it now and bluebells floor it.
A carved Christ presides, arms outstretched,
invites you to sit in among choirs of birdsong.

I bring the ashes here,

place them on the broken altar stones
and go.

The seasons’ turns will scatter them,
grain by grain, and set him free.

Foxes will nose the gray heap and
badgers spread the remains, and

Christ will hang there, arms 
outstretched, weary, compassionate.

Beth Brooke is a retired teacher, living on the Jurassic Coast of Dorset and drawing inspiration from its landscape. She is a Quaker. She has had poems published in a variety of journals and is currently working on her first poetry collection.

The mystery of earth’s interior – a poem by Misha Lazzara

The mystery of earth’s interior 
 
Some months pass in sweatpants before
I subscribe to the public broadcasting system’s 
documentary access. Because there’s a whole world
in here, and nowhere to go out there. I do recall being taught
—taught that the mystery of the planets 
and the history of the gods are a conflated heap—you know,
Venus with her pouty lips and curved hips. 
 
There used to be a god for every day of the week. Thunder, 
sex, chaos, real estate, the dead. Oh, lord, then the Christians
whittled it down to one. A bore. So, Bragi, god of poetry,
a tattooed tongue and supple wife with a plot in Asgard
near the rainbow bridge, both murdered
by missionaries. They killed all my favorite gods
I guess—Frigg, Freyja, Jörð. Childbirth, beauty, 
the earth itself. All except Thor, alive and well,
revived by an Australian movie star.
 
As a child I am told I am formed in Christ’s image. A body 
on a cross on a hillside. Stigmata—our youth group’s 
collective wet dream. Some sickness carries on
through adulthood when I am constantly reminded that
sacrifice is holy, and then grow, alarmingly, into a woman 
whose body is as crevassed as Calgary. 
 
In motherhood I witness where life comes from. I see
with my own eyes the bloodied orb—ball of my belly—
form a generation. Oblate ellipsoid, sloshing with iron. 
Even our smartest scientists don’t understand 
the pregnant core of our planet’s center. Only 
that it perpetuates life, somehow, in all its heaviness.
 
Maybe there is one god, after all. Do we even know
how those first people worshiped, ritualized creation? Who 
are the gods those women cried to during childbirth? Before 
Bragi before molecular baptisms before—when 
it was just feet on the earth, blood-soaked lightning bolts,
tectonic contractions, 
placental quakes,
gravity in her core. 

Misha Lazzara is an MFA candidate at North Carolina State University. Her work has appeared in Entropy Mag, frak/ture journal and more. Winner of the Academy of American Poets University Prize 2020 at NCSU. mishalazzara.com

Communion – a poem by Jean Biegun

Communion
 

I asked a being
a thirsty one sitting at a rectangular
table near the front window in Starbucks
What do you seek
 
and the person encasing that particular
soul closed a glowing laptop
took a sip of warm spicy chai
and looked at me
 
Who was I but another with earbuds
muffling my own neuronal mix
 
Yet quietly after two or three
moments we sighed                                    
shared some slow inhalations
of mutual comprehension
 
and then in our minds
knelt together on the polished
wooden floor
hands folded unselfconsciously



Jean Biegun, retired in Sacramento, CA, began writing poetry in 2000 as a way to overcome big-city job stress, and it worked.  Poems have been published in Mobius: The Poetry MagazineAfter Hours: A Journal of Chicago Writing and ArtWorld Haiku ReviewPresence: International Journal of Spiritual Direction and other places.

Kneeler – a poem by Barbara Daniels

Kneeler
 
She saw selectively—flaws 
in her skin, sagging thighs 
that bulked impressively 
 
over her knees. Her wooden 
kneeler clanked coldly, down 
for prayers, up for hymns. 
 
She sang in her sleep, waved 
an arm rhythmically, smiled, 
sighed. When she had breath, 
 
she breathed without thinking, 
thinking instead of thrushes 
in grottos of ferns, water moving 
 
beside them, songs plaintive, 
repeated, hawthorns unnamed 
except by the specialist, 
 
butterflies captured and held 
in her hands. She saw bits 
of blue wander through clover. 
 
Cars thrashed by. She didn’t 
believe in luck though 
she knew she was lucky. 
 
She knelt on the floor, on 
beach sand by water, on dark 
soil and the shining street.

Barbara Daniels’s Talk to the Lioness was published by Casa de Cinco Hermanas Press in 2020. Her poetry has appeared in Prairie Schooner, Mid-American Review, and elsewhere. Barbara Daniels received a 2020 fellowship from the New Jersey State Council on the Arts. 

Evening Mantra – a poem by Nancy K Jentsch

Evening Mantra 
 
Pour dusk’s song like wax 
from guttering candle 
that leaves a hushed stripe 
 
Listen to cat’s drowsy breath 
a stately Sarabande 
accompanying flame’s dance 
 
Sense pendulum sway 
in counterpoint 
to cat’s dreaming sleep 
 
Knit and purl a wish to frame 
and mount the moment 
despite clock’s mocking tick 

Nancy K. Jentsch’s poetry has appeared recently in EclecticaEcoTheo Review, Panoply and in numerous anthologies. In 2020, she received an Arts Enrichment Grant from the Kentucky Foundation for Women. Her chapbook, Authorized Visitors, was published in 2017 and her writer’s page on Facebook is https://www.facebook.com/NancyJentschPoet/