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i

i am an animal— should I not delight in this?

Should I not celebrate

bare skin and bared teeth?

Should I not

dance

barefoot in the light of the moon, jubilating in all that I am?

 

I praise this body that moves me— from the too rough soles of my feet, the hungry churn of my stomach, the burn between my legs. I give thanks to broken skim and bruises; these are the evidence of my life force.

 

I sit in a Labyrinth, a holy place where my brother & sister stones give me solemn council.

I feel life.

I smell it, I hear it, I taste it on cold air.

Life energies flitting all around me. I soak it up as my skin drinks the sun.

 

Am I thankful for life in this place?

No.

But I am happy to greet it. I accept its presence for another day and I move with it, dancing and contorting as I ought. I stretch my muscles and fill my lungs.

And in this moment I feel no fear.

 

When you do not fear Death how can you fear Life?

How can I fear anything in this life when death—full of the unknowing dark, full of the unblinking darkness, full of that which is unspoken— is known as a friend?

 

When you welcome death into yourself, you gain and lose life simultaneously.

While you see the day in a different light— more pure, calmer, brighter that you ever could have imagined— this light you are observing doesn’t really

reach you. It doesn’t

wash nor warm you as it

once

did.

Everything

becomes Colder.

Everything becomes colder, but the cold doesn’t hurt

quite

as

much.

It’s there, but distant— ebbing at the edges of my nerve endings, but my body doesn’t dispel it nor does it coil away, spitting. Rather, it embraces it. Grows little white flowers in its dark shade and growls merrily from the frozen ground.

Let Winter come

and let it awaken the dead-tree creature living within me, somewhere between my

spine

and

my

rib-bones.

Let the cold douse the fire and let that which is pale and hungry roam. Let it breathe its own fire amid the skeletons of Elms and Pine. Let this feverish animal breathe steam into the night air. Let it roam, choking and coughing on a too hot stomach {too much burbon and hot chemical fire}. Let it run itself back into the ground, squirming with the grubs and the centipedes, blind and snuffling, frantic.

 

You cannot cage your own animal nature.

It will only grow Wilder there. Wilder and hateful— it will turn on that which tried to lock it away. Let it live free, by Bone and by Fire, by Water and by Stone— let it come Alive.

 

Something made of teeth lives there, breathing shakily, bleeding and slithering in the dark we all try to put away from the light of social normality. Something anthropomorphic and angry. You can’t hide away that which is within you. Maybe it lives at the center of the Labyrinth, waiting on you to stumble upon it. Maybe it only lives at the Labyrinth’s edges— skittering around outside walls, keeping you fighting within it.

You could drown this creature with bourbon and whiskey, but it will only laugh and dance out of your throat. You could stab this animal, but it will only bleed ink and raven feathers. Ink from words left unwritten and thoughts unsaid.

I am the snake, the bird, the cat, the wasp, the human.

The Animal.

I am the mother, the daughter, the grandmother.

I am Alive.

There is power in the bones.

May mine rattle in the hollow night, may mine howl, hungry at the moon. May I crave blood, may I hunger for its life as my body hungers for sustenance.

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Written by
ashley-wade-parker
Published
Nov 12, 2012
Lines·Words
48·640
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