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*What did your face look like before your parents were  born?* -zen koan When I was a seven I wore a mask for the first time, the head of a lion, hand-painted, whiskered and grinning. That night I prowled my childhood   neighborhood, clawed at doors, took candy from strangers. The world was small then, my face encased in cardboard, thin slits for eyes, and still I remember, even at seven, sailing inwards, watching the dance of a candle flickering in the belly of a gourd. I watched it shift shape, twitch to reinvent itself again and again, capable in that green dim night of blooming into anything-- cliff birds rising on warm volcanic swells, a fox in the forest, cackling on its back in the ferns. I grew light, knew that I too was ember, flickering mystery, neither boy nor lion.
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Jan 4, 2013
Jan 4, 2013 at 1:05 PM UTC
The Face Imagination Gave Me
*What did your face look like before your parents were  born?* -zen koan When I was a seven I wore a mask for the first time, the head of a lion, hand-painted, whiskered and grinning. That night I prowled my childhood   neighborhood, clawed at doors, took candy from strangers. The world was small then, my face encased in cardboard, thin slits for eyes, and still I remember, even at seven, sailing inwards, watching the dance of a candle flickering in the belly of a gourd. I watched it shift shape, twitch to reinvent itself again and again, capable in that green dim night of blooming into anything-- cliff birds rising on warm volcanic swells, a fox in the forest, cackling on its back in the ferns. I grew light, knew that I too was ember, flickering mystery, neither boy nor lion.
kevin-mann
Written by
American
Jan 4, 2013
Jan 4, 2013 at 1:05 PM UTC
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