Poetry and Reflections

Tracktown, USA

In Eugene, I slept on the couch of an Herbalist.

If, in slumber, I leaned too far to my left,

the cushions would slump, sink, at a diagonal,

pulling my unconscious body down with them.

 

At 3 in the morning I’d awake to the sound of crickets outside the double doors

a nuzzle of black fur, a cat named Mortimer, pawing,

climbing his way towards me, then settling on my chest, his breathing

slowing to the rhythm of the dehydrator

that shriveled the marion-berries at our feet. Together,

pulled by a berry lullaby,

drifting back to the dreams we half-remembered,

awake when the crickets came again.

 

In Eugene I harvested blackberry leaves and mother’s wort

beside the Herbalist, learned to ease headaches and cramps,

nausea and allergies with bottles of sweet-smelling, earth.

We cleared patches of grass until our thumbs blistered and the sunflowers

awoke with smiles on their cheeks, risen from a warm-bedding earth.

We picked blackberries form the branches as we worked,

our browned gloves barely free of our hands

by the time the solid sweet crushed to liquid,

and bid hello to our parched tongues.

 

In Eugene I ran from the Amazon Park to the Willamette River,

light footsteps thumping past TJ’s Provisions “the best cannabis in town,”

a bleacher of dread-locked fans cheered me on from the sidewalk

in dazed stardom, “girl, you training for a marathon?”

They rose, hazy, while I fell, more alive. In Eugene.

 

In Eugene the Herbalist sang for me,

strummed her guitar to questions I never thought

I always wondered. The rhythms asked me what one says

before they say I love you. I told them I don’t know. I

told them ask the blackberries.

The Herbalist and I shared stories,

a plate of tempeh bacon, a bottle of red wine.

 

In Eugene I paid for a 10-dollar chair massage

from an old woman in a long, gray braid and a crinkled, orange tunic

at the Saturday Farmers Market. I reminded her

of Venita, the teenage cousin who listened to Stevie Nicks,

smoked cigarettes out the car window. She

wanted to be just like Venita when she grew up, thanked

me for reminding her to call Venita, sometime soon.

Another time. Another day.

There would be other days for weeding and planting,

for singing, for dancing and doing.

There would always be other days

In a town like Eugene.

 

In Eugene I slept on the couch of an Herbalist.

She gave me an album of love songs, tinctures of herbs

to kiss my sore throat,

two cloud-cushions to cup my tired, my lonely, my nomad limbs,

and handfuls of Concord grapes.

I felt lonely then loved then lonely again,

Then wondered if I might just move to a little house

with an herb garden,

grow blackberries around the porch,

adopt a cat and name him after an old, British man

once I reach California.

 

 

 

*Cover image from https://www.pinterest.com/pin/734438651705888805/