Blog PostsFriends | [Prajñāpāramitā ... I Am On My Knees Again][Enter the Void by Juan Felipe Herrera]I enter the void, it has the shape of a viola: Israel, Jenin, West Bank, Nablus—a rubble boy shifts his scapula as if it was his continent, underground Gazaground, I want to say—his only bone, the rubble boy is a girl, I think, her hair tossed, knotted and torn under the green shank of fibers, tubes and shells. She digs for her rubble father, I say rubble because it is indistinguishable from ice, fire, dust, clay, flesh, tears, concrete, bread, lungs, pubis, god, say rubble, say water— the rubble girl digs for her rubble mother, occupation—disinheritance—once again, I had written this somewhere, in a workshop, I think, yes, it was an afternoon of dark poets with leaves, coffee and music in the liquor light room. A rock, perhaps it's a rock, juts out, two rocks embrace each other, the shapes come to me easily, an old poetic reflex—memoria, a nation underground, that is it, the nation under-ground, that is why the rocks cover it. I forget to mention the blasts, so many things flying, light, existence, the house in tins, a mother in rags. It is too cold to expose her tiny legs, the fish-shaped back—you must take these notes for me. Before you go. See this undulate extend beyond the pools of blood. I ride the night, past the Yukon, past South Laredo, past Odessa, past the Ukraine, old Jaffa, Haifa and Istanbul, across clouds, hesitant and porous, listen— they are porous so we can glide into them, this underbelly, this underground: wound-mothers and sobbing fathers, they leave, in their ribboned flesh, shores lisp against nothingness, open—toward you, they dissolve again into my shoes— Hear the dust gong: gendarme passports, cloned maize men in C-130's, with tears bubbling on their hands, pebbles en route—we are all en route to the rubblelands. I want to chant a bliss mantra— Prajnaparamita can you hear me? I want to call for the dragon-slayer omchild. I am on my knees again. On the West Bank count the waves of skull debris—a Hebrew letter for "love" refuses me, an Arabic letter for "boundary" acknowledges me. Sit on an embankment, a dust fleece, there is a tidal wave ahead of me. It will never reach me. I live underground, under the Dead Sea, under the benevolent rocks and forearms and mortar shells and slender naked red green torsos, black, so much black. En route: this could be a train, listen: it derails into a cloud. ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- [Prajñāpāramitā - Goddess of Transcendent Wisdom https://neozen888.wordpress.com/tag/prajnaparamita-sutra/] Mr_Mindblank: To me, it reminds me of this poem's final line: "it derails into a cloud." In the Heart Sutra, 'sunyata' (emptiness) is the Prajnaparamita (the perfection of wisdom). "Insight of prajnaparamita is the most liberating insight that helps us overcome all pairs of opposites such as birth and death, being and non-being, defilement and immaculacy, increasing and decreasing, subject and object, and so on, and helps us to get in touch with the true nature of no birth/no death, no being/no non-being etc., which is the true nature of all phenomena. This is a state of coolness, peace, and non-fear that can be experienced in this very life, in your own body and in your own five skandhas. It is nirvana. Just as the birds enjoy the sky, and the deer enjoy the meadow, so do the wise enjoy dwelling in nirvana"(Thich Nhat Hanh, commentary on Prajnaparamita Heart Sutra). This is how the poet can say, "I enter the void," then later, "they are porous so we can glide / into them." (Post deleted by paganpoetry ) FistOfStone: this poem is way over my head but it is one hell of a poem, i wish i had the spiritual patience to unravel it, i sense that it is just breathtakingly profound paganpoetry: Fist, for the most part, I see what seems like various images of destruction, rubble, shells, dust, death, perhaps the voice of the person sitting on the embankment, calling for a heart mantra, crying out for help, to get through the current chaos. I'm not totally sure. I am very impressed by his work so far though.
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Causing so many birds to lose their way home.
(Thich Nhat Hanh, commentary on the Prajnaparamita Heart Sutra)