Ojo Caliente: Metamorphoses

May 20, 2013

Voices, Art / Culture

1.
The summer has been shattering.
Too much pressure and heat
change the nature of stone.
For this, we walk a dry path
under the spiraled flight of two eagles
disappearing into blue.

2.
The lightness of letting go is good to sink into.
Golden and afloat, leaves drift, sonorous
in their descent.  We pass ancient villages, 
small mounds along the stony path. Peaks
blue in the distance, shimmer under snow.

3.
Along the trail, we look for snakes
in cool cracks of granite
The magnitude of the day opens,
a way in. Mica gleams from dark caves, flaked light, glass.

4.
Nothing lasts forever. Even here,
the gods of heat and water
break through red stone into steamy pools
of sulfur, arsenic, iron.

5.
A woman with cats on her socks wanders
across a bluff. Bodies are sanctuaries
of loneliness. We remember to look up,
find the fingernail of a moon.




This piece was written by:

Tina Carlson's photo

Tina Carlson

Tina Carlson is a psychiatric nurse practitioner and mom of a teenage daughter. She is currently waiting for some owlets to hatch in a tree in her work parking lot and hoping for rain in New Mexico.

Contact Tina Carlson

Responses to “Ojo Caliente: Metamorphoses”