Zen Master Son of a Prostitute (poetry)

In direct Buddha lineage
Name chanted reverently
What of his mother?
Was she the Earth-dirt body
Flesh of his own body
He had to overcome?
John-sweat on his infant skin
The suffering that took twelve
Wheels turning to overturn?
How long must he have been
Sitting before he realized
He could not un-cling to pain
For her? But only
For himself let go of her
Whore’s weeping held
Storming in his mind?

I sit efforting my eyes to stay
Down and unfocused the smell
Of john-sweat rises to my nose
The grimacing gatekeeper of
I might give birth to a roshi
Back screaming in this broken chair
Sitting straighter than shame
Knees spread wide
Hands an open oval
Over my womb

The first cry
Sweaty mother and destiny
Kissed child is a relief
The cord is cut the un-clinging
Begun —a tiny red fist
Opening unnaturally
Separation sustained
And dissolved
Son of prostitute becomes
Prostitute becomes her son
Becomes a single drop of blood
Mixed on the scroll chanted reverently
Direct lineage of the Buddha.

-M. Ashley

River God (poetry)

My god a raft
Naked lazy backstroke
Beneath me water
Washing over his chest
I lie back
Under my back
The veil
Clear and sweet
I feel his muscles work
Droplets on my lips
As each arm
Raises and lowers
Behind us
Honey sweet
Drought-rain sweet
Crisp the veil
My dewy face
His heartbeat
Never not water enough
For god to swim in
Never a pleasure veil
Thinner than this
Rapid flood trickle
The stroke
Backward
Nude
Feet last
Easy

-M. Ashley

Meditating with Eyes Closed (poetry)

Divine stereo listening with my eyes
Closed in the sweet spot under the patio
Not far from the hanging seed
The crows confabulate in a
Narrowing circle above my head
The orange-breasted robins on the left and
Plain brown wrens quarrel in the dense
Mock oranges the gardener recently chopped
The tops of making less space and more rancor.
From somewhere on the right a bossy bluejay gets
Off his feathery duff and regulates—loudly.

I sit so still a fat white dove comes to the feeder within
Two arms’ reach and clicks seeds into his beak
The sound of raindrops spitting against glass.
My eyes are closed but I know he is fat because I have been
Feeding my backyard aviary heartily—because his wing beats are
Heavy when he flies away—and because the plastic feeder swings
And squeaks on its rusty hook in his absence.

I know he is pure white because
My imagination tells me so.

A too-warm-for-early-March breeze sidles
In from the East—the one wind whose name
I don’t know—and plays a single note on the
Copper wind chime to my right before touching
My hand the way a virgin who wants
A lover with his whole body is only brave enough
To suggest hand-holding
One soft pinky tip to another.

The no-name virgin god-wind and all the bawdy
Many-named and sun-shining gods and all the white
And black and blue and brown and orange birds

And the magenta hibiscus—the coral
The gold, the scarlet

And the topaz pool
The empty terracotta pots
All the cement the color of cement

Nothing separate—color, sound,
Birds, flesh, wind. One
Pulsing lover and beloved

And gratitude—the snake
Who worships and adores his own tail
His eyes half bliss slits as he consumes it
Whole—too sweet for venom or bite
And ever expanding this tail as it moves
Through his body passing each one of his
Seven humming hearts, emerging from
Him longer and more glorious than before
Expanding the circle endlessly
Scale by glistening scale.

Seed by seed
Petal by petal
Feather by feather
Melody by melody
Ear by ear
Both eyes closed.

-M. Ashley

Spring Fade (poetry)

First day of Spring and 100 degrees
The third day, in fact, of 100 degrees

The flowers are confused
The fuchsia hibiscus are bleached white

At the tips—the heat drained the powder-
Puff pink out of the tea roses too

There is a coral flowering something-or-other
Creeping over the wall from our northern neighbor

Begging the yellow podocarpus for shade
And receiving none

My mother signed her will two years ago today
In her last hospital bed smiling with her shaved

Stitched head bare. My best friend and hers
Were there to witness. It was a party.

A female doodle named Eliot dropped by
“Prayed” two paws up on my mother’s bedside

My mom belly laughed so hard, her needle bruised hand
Running through Eliot’s curly red hair, I swear

She almost popped a stitch. She told the story
Of the time we almost got arrested by the California

Fruit police on the way home from rescuing me from
“That slob in Oklahoma!” No one remembered that

But her. None of us doubted it. She was sharp. Topaz
Blue eyes shining bluer than blue. I wish

I had eyes like that. I wishI could remember that story

All of your stories, Mom, I wishYou could tell them again

And again, each sweltering Spring,
We could sit here in your house complaining 

About the heat and the color fading from
Your bewildered flowers, missing you. Missing you. 

-M. Ashley

The Zen Buddhist Monk’s Feet (haiku)

The Buddhist monk’s feet?
Exceptionally clean
Bottoms most of all

I wanted to ask
While he drank his tea after
If he worried ever

About pedicures
Or let his feet be his feet
Even if the soles

Were rough and sooty
And the whole zendo gossiped
About where he’d walked

The rough illusion:
Crane white soles are holier
Than earth-dirty soles

The reality:
Shea butter socks overnight
No one’s the wiser.

-M. Ashley

I went to my first dharma talk today.

Spaghetti Tao (poetry)

I am making spaghetti for my family

My trick is a little garlic salt in the boiling water

My husband calls that the love

Garlic salt is my trick for everything holy in our food

My husband says it’s the love

Casino is playing in the family room 

On our tiny television in the giant entertainment center

My mother bought thirty years ago when furniture

Was still real and heavy

One day I will get rid of it so we can have

A bigger TV, but today the little TV is enough

And I don’t mind the behemoth it sits in with

All my mother’s tchotchkes in the glass-doored

Cabinets and her ashes in a wooden urn on the corner shelf

The f-bombs from Casino float into the kitchen where

I am about to drain the garlic salt water pasta and

In my mind, I sing along with Joe Pesci as they come

My favorite movie, this scene one of my favorite songs

My husband and I appreciate vociferously his breath control

I drain the pasta and the salty steam rises to give me a much needed

Pore cleanser before billowing out of the open kitchen window

Into the twilight of a cool Southern California autumn that waited

Until mid-November to come but, blessedly, did come

I stop with the hot pasta strainer in both hands

Everything.

Everything.

Everything

Is perfect

Just as it is

The Goddess of All-That-Is

Has passed by my window

Come in through the open back door

Patted my poodle’s curly-topped head as she entered

Swayed into the kitchen

Stood beside me at the sink

Rustled her moonlight robes just enough so

That I could smell her whole dusky body

And her celestial perfume.

It smells like garlic salt, autumn, boxed pasta

Heavy wood, ashes, jarred sauce, 

My husband’s day old Old Spice, puppy dog

And love

-M. Ashley

I am studying both Taoism and Zen Buddhism. In one of my Taoist readers for today, the author talks about how Taoists read and write poetry. That gave me a little kick in the butt to get back to it. And especially in a way that honors one of the strongest Is-ness or Flow or Tao moments I have ever had. The words still aren’t quite getting it, but it is a pleasure to try.

Worthy (poetry)

As if the merry current weren’t worthy
As if anguish were worthy

I flail against it
Take in great gulps
Muscles give out
Lungs fill up
I go under surely
The last time then rise
Flailing harder

I end up downstream anyway
The merry current is still merry

-M. Ashley

I have been studying Taoism which seems so natural to me and so lighthearted. Then I started flirting with Zen Buddhism which, by comparison, is difficult and austere. In meditation today it tickled me how this pattern shows up over and over again in my life: When something is easy and natural, I’m quick to toss it away because surely something that loverly can’t be truly valuable! I must SUFFER! I’m not sure if that’s a Puritanical echo or what, but such nonsense! The merry current is still merry and I end up downstream anyway. Why not relax and enjoy the flow?

I Guess I Was a Writer All Along

When my fiancé got into bed with me last night he started talking about how he used to tape whole albums off the radio when he was a kid. He got specific. He had to have his mom buy him TDK 90 minute blank tapes—the solid gray ones in the gold wrappers, $2 apiece and sold in packs of five. Maxell was so-so—he would settle for Maxell, but Memorix with its clear tapes and groovy shapes all over was the worst of the worst and he wouldn’t put a single note on that. 

He talked about cataloguing the tapes—one album per side. Listening to the DJs talk about the albums and all the music trivia. He still listens to music talk, constantly. He follows about six hundred rock music podcasts and can DJ every song on Sirius with about thirty times the DJ juice as whatever has-been they’ve hired. He is an encyclopedia of rock. Sometimes I’ll turn on classic rock stations that I only marginally like just to give him the opportunity to fan his feathers for me, and it is glorious.

He told me he tried the guitar and piano as a kid because those are the types of instruments a blind kid is supposed to go for, but it wasn’t until someone put him in front of a drum kit that he thought yes…. I can really find my way around here. It all clicked along with the click track and he was a drummer, through-and-through forevermore. He started doing session work in LA by the time he was 14. At 50, he plays in three different bands and bursts out with drum solos on his knees randomly while I’m making dinner, while we’re waiting on an Uber, and even sometimes in the bathroom, (don’t tell him I told you that). 

Music, and rock music specifically, and drumming even more specifically than that is the way he makes his way in the world and he has no internal conflict whatsoever about that. I admire that. More than admire: I envy that. More than envy: I am deeply jealous of his soul’s love for its native art. And I wish my soul were that way about writing. It’s getting there, but it has taken a long long time.

Sometimes, when I’m depressed, I find myself doing “depressed” things long before I ever acknowledge I’m depressed. I stop taking care of myself and dressing in nice clothes. I curl up in bed and watch a lot of nostalgia bomb reruns I’ve seen ten thousand times. Walking from room to room makes me tired. I cook the simplest things for dinner—lots of blue box and ramen. But it isn’t until days and days later, when I find myself wrapped up in my blanket cocoon in bed, barely able to move, that I think, “Oh wow. I must be having a depression.”

It’s kind of like that with me and writing. 

While Angel was obsessing over TDK vs. Memorex as a kid, I was writing. I wrote my first real poem in the fifth grade and the teacher loved it so much, she posted it in the window for the whole school to see. I still remember it:

The moon is a jagged diamond

Hanging and waiting in suspense

For someone to pluck him from this mine of darkness

That holds him captive

Captive in a sea of stars

That no one dares enter

For fear they’d never return

We were learning about metaphors and similes when I wrote that. I chose metaphor.

I used to ride the bus to school composing poems. As I grew, the poetry onslaught continued. I’d type them on my little Canon electric typewriter that printed a whole line at a time, and put them in packets in the kind of folders you’d put school reports in. I’d give the packets titles and slip them to my teacher on the sly. 

I put my poetry in the front cover of my clear-covered three ring binder in high school and changed it out regularly. I wrote down song lyrics from memory and broke the lines apart the way I thought they should be broken.

I wrote satirical pieces in junior high, high school, and college and got in major trouble with teachers and schoolmates over it, but kept doing it anyway. 

I sat in the wood-paneled study room in college with my left hand pressed against my forehead writing short stories longhand for hours as day turned to night, turned to very late night. I’d dance around air-conducting baroque music thinking of what next things my characters should be doing and what most clever ways I could say it. 

All through the eight years I was trafficked—even then during that horrendous abuse, I spent so much of my “free” time alone at the keyboard writing endlessly about what was happening to me. I filled countless file folders on my shiny new Gateway computer and more spiral notebooks than I could ever keep track of. Words words words as Shakespeare would say. They didn’t always make sense during that time, but they kept me anchored to something, even if it was just my own hands moving, the click of the keys, the scratch of the pen, the flick of one page to the next.

I went to the Iowa Summer Writers’ Workshop twice and found my joy and my people. I didn’t bring an essay for class. I wrote it while I was there. I stayed up late in my hotel room writing it. I dashed into the college computer lab the day it was my turn to be workshopped, typed it out at emergency speed, and ran in to class with my ten copies, wet ink drying on my fingers. 

And after I survived the trafficking, while I was barely surviving survival, when I was desperately poor and living in an apartment that had roaches in the dishwasher, when I was working at Walmart and smoking with old Southern ladies and bitching about customers, managers, and my swollen feet, I never stopped writing. I started a blog about my Walmart experiences. I started a blog about world spirituality. I started a blog about my burgeoning Paganism. I started a blog about 12 step recovery. I started a blog about tarot. I started this blog. I started more blogs. I started a blog… I started a blog… I started a blog… 

And now, twenty years after the trafficking ended and nearly forty years after I wrote my first poem, and probably over fifty blog starts later, I am still writing. And I am reading Writing Down the Bones and realizing for the first time, after all this time, that I am a writer. I am a writer all the way down to my bones and always have been. I am a writer the way Angel is a drummer. I am a writer the way Natalie Goldberg is a writer.

It’s how I make my way in the world. It always has been whether I wanted it to be or not. My passion for the written word has burned for decades in spite of myself. 

I wonder what will happen when I embrace its burning as myself. 

My very own self.

We shall see.

-M. Ashley