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Thursday, April 9, 2020

Lake Susan into Flat Creek

Lake Susan is damed up and has a nice little flow into Flat Creek, which as it tumbles down the mountains is not ever a bit flat.


Ten Thousand Villages shop is on the upper floor of the building by the dam. About this time every year, The Sahara Women's Choir has sung to raise funds to support a local women's program, and the store has offered a percentage of sales to it as well. With the closures, no concerts, and no store sales, I wonder how the non-profits are also doing.





My friend, musician and poet, Annelinde Metzner, wrote a great poem...The Egg. Check out her blog!

The Egg

The egg, elliptical, luminous, whole,
separate, indivisible, complete,
nexus of life, invisible, unspoken,
unnamable ancestral pearl of power,
chosen one: you are my pride, my treasure.
I nurture and guard you with all my life,
a green dragon whose jewel lies hidden
in the humming recesses of her dark-red cave.
I share you with the mammals, and the fish too,
the birds, amphibians, insects, snakes:
our common inheritance, our common being.
All of us, whether we fly or swim,
trot, slither or leap beyond our height,
we all love you the same, and commend you
with lifetimes of attention and lavished care.
There are others, too, ferns and firs,
and maybe fruits, too, our cousins
guarded within the muscled trunks
of our rooted green sisters who grow in the Earth.
There they pull from the black nutrition
the crystals of power, the amino molecules,
fuel from which you radiate light
in fruit, in flower, in ovule, in shell.
I feel you well, with every moon,
through thirteen moons in every year.
You arise and make yourself plain,
crown jewel in the parade of our homeland,
flowering, intoxicating, odoriferous, fecund,
temple priestess of life everlasting
in burgundy velvet, concealing and beckoning.
It is easy, and not easy, to court you, egg,
and find you whole, enthroned in all life,
at once at the center and imminent in all things.
It is easy, and yet to properly seek you,
one must have peace, and presence, and life,
abundant life, and love without question
that leaps into the future, many times ones own height.
I bought a dozen of you today,
to boil you and color you, an essence, a symbol,
a ritual item more real than words
and you’re everywhere, among baskets and bunnies,
colored and white, foam and fluff,
and children’s hands under the bushes.
It is Eostar, your long-ago day
when Russian mothers baked you into bread,
and Czech mothers painted you for hours,
and my own ancestors walked for miles
to gather you one by one from afar,
all of us looking to the reborn world,
the flyers, the creepers, the unfathomable sea-swimmers.
These eggs are ours, our hours, our years,
the perfect pearls of our lives.


Annelinde Metzner
March 19. 1989

       "My German family had many deep memories of gathering and dying eggs at Easter.  In the Slavic countries there is an ancient tradition of Pysanka, engraving eggs with wax as protective charms for the house.  Read some fascinating history of pysanka here.


Annelinde Metzner

3 comments:

  1. ...these are tough times for non-profits too!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. This triggered me to send a donation, both to my friend the poet, as well a the shelter for women victims of violence.

      Delete
  2. I imagine it's going to take a long time before everything can operate well again.

    ReplyDelete

There is today, more than ever, the need for a compassionate regenerative world civilization.