I have taken to taking baths in the middle of the day
Just so I can touch my body,
squeeze my thighs and my cheeks like a baby’s
and play in the warm water,
and watch the oil droplets roll over my skin,
mixing words of love with the steam.
I have taken to singing to the roses
as I give the deadheads a trim,
asking them things I’ve always wanted to know
finding myself bashful, blushing at their beauty
embarrassed I’ve never slowed enough before
to let it be so.
I’ve taken to crawling under the lemon tree
to pluck the zesty low globules,
dirt on my knees,
carrying my bounty in my skirt
for my soul to squeeze.
I have taken to harvesting only the veg I’ll eat today,
though I’m entirely squirreline
I relinquish control to meet the sublime,
to delight in the ordinariness
of these green teachers
of the art of eating life
and letting go.
I have taken to dancing at dusk for the sheep
in the back field
in an outrageously sexy
and feckless display
with my farm boots pressing
poo to earth
face purpled with joy and evening glory.
I have taken to feeling the dark set in,
closing the curtains on the screaming countrysilence
with nothing to switch on to switch off the feelings
so that I might sit, stew and drink in this dense aloneness
this thick nothing
that, eventually, connects me with
everything.
I have taken to collecting dead things
bumble bees, moths, cicada shells, and birds
to bury, burn, or behold
to release as I wait without hope
for what the future might bring
still, I keep the dream burning
as all dreamers must do —
so life can pour through
as liquid gold.