Saturday, January 29, 2011

Icy Sestina



Even in the winter, there are waves.
The movement of water is difficult to stop.
Even when the lake is covered with large scales of ice--
seemingly static and unmoving, listening carefully, you can hear
the relentless movement of water, pushing, shoving,
thrusting forward, slamming up against the frozen waterline.



I’ve always loved it, when a man kisses me at my hairline.
He’s really brushing against the waves
of my burdens--shoving
aside my insecurities with his lips--stop
ing my incessant self-criticism mid-thought, forcing me to hear
the beat of my own heart.  The ice


underneath the surface is fragile. Ice
is like that.  There’s no telling what’s actually below the waterline.
--all the mixed messages; desire...to crush, to melt, to conquer, to be conquered ...you hear
it underneath the silence of ice; the constant conversation of waves
which, so far as I know, never stop--
always continue their jockeying and shoving...


Buddhists attempt to stop all the shoving.
Better to be still like ice.
Accept whatever state you are in.  Stop
the wheel of desire.  Step to the waterline
and drink.  Ride waves.
But most importantly,listen.  Because you might hear


the precise moment when the ice fissures and the heart opens.  I hear
great tectonic plates of ice shoving
through, creating a path, dragging the detritus, along with everything good, on waves
of love.  Remember that ice
is merely another form of water.  And the coastline
is where the water finally comes to a stop;


a rest.  This is where the pitch of the song is stopped
and the change can be heard.
The truth of things comes out at the coastal line--
the fact that I don’t want to shove
or jockey for position.  I’d like to lay, not like the iceberg, formidable and foreboding, but like the ice
that’s melting and in the process of becoming something softer, to eventually ride the waves


travelling to the edge of the waterline.  Getting rest at that stop
to ride the waves again and again. Listening to that music you can hear
underneath the shoving and desire.  And finally, for a while anyway, put the fear on ice.

© 2011 Germania Solórzano


4 comments:

  1. beautiful sestina, g ---- you've inspired me, yet again, to keep writing. i love this poem. especially these lines pierced:

    "you might hear/the precise moment when the ice fissures and the heart opens..."

    and this one:

    "remember that ice/is merely another form of water"

    YES. beautiful writing and images. i miss working and thinking with you. i've gone far, far away, with plans to come back eventually.

    much love, a

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  2. Hey you, thanks. I don't know why I've been writing poems lately. I love your blog, by the way. Yes, we were a good team when we taught together.

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  3. Most touching to me was this part:

    "...when a man kisses me at my hairline, He’s really brushing against the waves of my burdens--shoving aside my insecurities with his lips--stopping my incessant self-criticism mid-thought, forcing me to hear the beat of my own heart." Thank you for sharing that private moment so eloquently.

    Also, "The truth of things comes out at the coastal line" reminded me of when I used to do beach clean-up days for work. The coast would look beautiful from a distance, not even all that far away, but up close you found all the cigarette butts, the needles, the plastic containers, the diapers, the floating debris of human existence....

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  4. John, I think you need to write a poem about beach clean up. I actually like the observation about the trash on the beach.

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