born into an ethic of separate and apart, knows nothing of the promise of oneness and the slow release of held breath when I glimpse that I’m not.
my foremothers in the summer kitchen, preserving (1 part berries : 1 part sugar, splash of lemon) lived the kinship of shovel sun soil hands jam on buttered bread.
heads bowed under kerchief, shushing children, devoted (1 part fervour : 1 part obedience, splash of sorrow) sang the hymns of their mothers on hard benches in one voice, one breath.
but the air is made of argon too, and contains the breath of all others, the ones not on hard benches, or making jam no lines in the sand made of belief or blood not them, just us.
today with my own shovel, sifting through roots and buds (1 part rage : 1 part faith, splash of sorrow) I sing “Ain’t got no, I got life” at full volume with Nina, two voices same breath.
Here is the awesome Nina Simone song I mention: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=L5jI9I03q8E&t=0s&list=PLkbO-DIg2u3X0gIUVKrjY4mV7YRg9rJCL&index=24