Crabgrass Receives a Reply
Posted: Mon Mar 30, 2020 5:34 pm
Crabgrass Receives a Reply -in gratitude, Albert K.*
You have been invading me for some years now, creeping on your belly in the hours of the day, upright in the night— save for full-moon skies.
Once, you pooled my brain, pushed me to the right-- wordless, thoughtless-- you dumped me into being.
Once, you took the longest time, longer than your style. You clogged my heart. crashed it to a halt.
One night, you vice-gripped my right quadrant rotting me in my own juices.
Not surprising that these past these past few years, seeing me get all puffed-up, thinking myself once again so smart, you took to swimming in my lymph.
You slowed me down-- down to a lower gear. Gave me a taste of honest fear, demanded I surrender my wrinkled paper crown.
Like your friends with Latin names, you joined the ranks of my tor-mentors**, obeyed the call to smash my hardened form,
to throw me on the wheel, to shape me whole again.
But wait a minute, here. While you potter me anew I lose hold of my mind in this longest meantime of my life.
In fact, you crumble up my mind pilfer my rigid ways. You break my back and steal my step. You call yourself my friend?
You say your visit is to heal, to help me touch my soul, to hold the hand of pain, to suffer and forgive,
to love you with my beaten body, to worship you within?
Tonight, the moon half way, you fill me with sharp light, you let me taste with passion the presence of my body-pain.
But more than that, you ask me to stay still, to feel the joy in pain – the royal fountain road.
You slice my neck, and still you want me to believe that all this work of healing is not to stay alive.
Have you indeed lost your mind peddling me this crock?
Hear me, if you will. The paradox is that your illness is also your lost pearl – the finding of your Self.
You have been chosen to come back to SELF your first and lasting home. I’m here to sell you HOPE.
Let go of dead deceit. Your soul is born for truth. You lost sight of the narrow road. Illness is your map.
Descend the deeper darkness. Walk it willingly.
Don’t tell me you’ve forgotten the saying carved in stone: Vocatus atque non vocatus, Deus aderit.
Invited or not invited, God will be present. So is it with your illness. Humbled, it will make you bold.
Easy for you to say— beyond the reach of time. I live here in small spaces, and soul-making is no game.
Unmask your hidden shame. and you shall be unburdened.
Is it your task to teach me how to yoke the necessary sufferings of the soul; that therein lies the healing of a rebelling, aging self;
that once I welcome everything—and all things that I am— I will have nothing more to fight against, not even searing pain?
*Kreinheder, A. (1991). Body and Soul: The Other Side of Illness. Toronto, Canada: Inner City Books.**Term created by Richard Schwartz, creator and founder of Internal Family Systems Therapy
You have been invading me for some years now, creeping on your belly in the hours of the day, upright in the night— save for full-moon skies.
Once, you pooled my brain, pushed me to the right-- wordless, thoughtless-- you dumped me into being.
Once, you took the longest time, longer than your style. You clogged my heart. crashed it to a halt.
One night, you vice-gripped my right quadrant rotting me in my own juices.
Not surprising that these past these past few years, seeing me get all puffed-up, thinking myself once again so smart, you took to swimming in my lymph.
You slowed me down-- down to a lower gear. Gave me a taste of honest fear, demanded I surrender my wrinkled paper crown.
Like your friends with Latin names, you joined the ranks of my tor-mentors**, obeyed the call to smash my hardened form,
to throw me on the wheel, to shape me whole again.
But wait a minute, here. While you potter me anew I lose hold of my mind in this longest meantime of my life.
In fact, you crumble up my mind pilfer my rigid ways. You break my back and steal my step. You call yourself my friend?
You say your visit is to heal, to help me touch my soul, to hold the hand of pain, to suffer and forgive,
to love you with my beaten body, to worship you within?
Tonight, the moon half way, you fill me with sharp light, you let me taste with passion the presence of my body-pain.
But more than that, you ask me to stay still, to feel the joy in pain – the royal fountain road.
You slice my neck, and still you want me to believe that all this work of healing is not to stay alive.
Have you indeed lost your mind peddling me this crock?
Hear me, if you will. The paradox is that your illness is also your lost pearl – the finding of your Self.
You have been chosen to come back to SELF your first and lasting home. I’m here to sell you HOPE.
Let go of dead deceit. Your soul is born for truth. You lost sight of the narrow road. Illness is your map.
Descend the deeper darkness. Walk it willingly.
Don’t tell me you’ve forgotten the saying carved in stone: Vocatus atque non vocatus, Deus aderit.
Invited or not invited, God will be present. So is it with your illness. Humbled, it will make you bold.
Easy for you to say— beyond the reach of time. I live here in small spaces, and soul-making is no game.
Unmask your hidden shame. and you shall be unburdened.
Is it your task to teach me how to yoke the necessary sufferings of the soul; that therein lies the healing of a rebelling, aging self;
that once I welcome everything—and all things that I am— I will have nothing more to fight against, not even searing pain?
*Kreinheder, A. (1991). Body and Soul: The Other Side of Illness. Toronto, Canada: Inner City Books.**Term created by Richard Schwartz, creator and founder of Internal Family Systems Therapy