I am a priestess of the dark.
It pours through me like a holy river.
All the rest is pantomime;
a trojan horse to
deliver
ruin to your ramparts,
remembrance
to your aching heart.
You ask me if I tire
from all this giving —
oh, beloved,
if I believed this love was mine
or of limited supply
I might;
but I know
I’m being used,
there’s nought to give
that was ever mine, so
my land surrenders
to the river and
I am washed and carried
by a greater life.
I ask of you
when you arrive,
confused with sleep
in your childish eyes —
“why are you here?”
and you all offer
the very same line:
“I don’t know why.
I really don’t know why.”
That’s fine —
I do.
You’re here for that drop
that’ll last you a lifetime.
The rhythms from afar
drummed an old song on your heart;
the words had no meaning
but carried the tune, so
let my words wash like tides;
let my hands be the horizon
over which you disappear;
there’s little for me to do
now you’re here
and I’m here
shedding all the skins
I dressed me in,
the robes around my shoulders
so I could step onto the temple floor
the attire I required to
believe that I belonged here
the sermons I acquired
the knowledge borrowed,
moves mastered,
courage mustered —
nothing’s left, and
I don’t need it anymore.
I am,
I am,
I am
the secret word
that opens
the back door
to the all
and the nothing
and the
darkness
at your core.