“come, come, whoever you are,
wanderer, worshiper, lover of leaving.”
(Jelaluddin Rumi,1207-1273, transl. by Coleman Barks)
We come New Year’s day, to Sandy Mush,
that Shangri-la, quiet always, but quieter still, this January day,
the rapeseed fields lying fallow, waiting for Spring’s yellow,
the old dogs and the old farmers beside their wood stoves.
“Ours is no caravan of despair.”
And it isn’t! Many old friends, one behind the other,
to get there for sharing warm food and warm regards,
to share births, deaths, all the new, all the new.
The caravan shifts on the leaf-layered road,
and one tire goes ‘way out over the abyss.
“Stop the car!” and everyone hops out.
What to do? But a neighbor has a "come-along."
This has gone on before, so many times before,
at the end of a long dirt road, where we are our own future,
it’s only us, and what we can do,
stuck on the road in winter.
Twenty arms and hands, a dozen brains
ponder and work, trying this and that,
pulling here and tugging there,
until, voila! the van is free with its big load,
a wheelchair and four eager passengers.
We’re free!
“Come yet again, come!”
Arriving up at the top of the road,
laden with food and one more good story,
we eat, hug, regale and gather around the flames,
lighting candles for the world,
for our futures and all peoples’,
for making it one more day in this body.
Out to the woods to dance beneath the grey, bare trees,
for Allah, for God, for the Goddess,
and to remember,
as grey winter clouds lumber gloriously across the sky,
we are all here together in this.
We are all one.
Annelinde Metzner January 4, 2012
Listen to a reading of "New Year's Gathering" by Annelinde:
Another poem read at the gathering:
"As I was thinking of you three squirrels came
and rubbed their tails against me.
Which reaffirmed my notion of things, being:
that everyone is really on the right track
even if a wheel now and then gets stuck,
or even runs over someone."
(Hafiz, version by Daniel Ladinsky)
Come-along to the rescue!
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