Do you ever get those evenings that never quite fall into an activity, or a rhythm?
The hours drift by, unfulfilled. The rain falls in rich curtains of fertility. Everything is bathing, the trees, shrubs, flowers, birds, earthworms. But your mind strays, unfocussed.
I wouldn't call it boredom, but it sort of is.
When nothing you can think of is enough to rouse you from your couch of comfort. The hours aren't weaving or unweaving anything. You're just wasting them.
You feel spent, uninspired, worked over, at odds, suspended.
I don't feel like drawing
or walking the dog.
I don't feel like being alive
or dead.
Or creating art out of my life.
I don't feel like being alone,
or with anyone.
The lush Spring rain
simply falls
without metaphor.
You want to eat something
to nourish and fulfill
but all the multi-grain breads and cereals, the fruits, oranges, apples, strawberries, grapes, and almonds and raisons and cheeses, the fresh vegetables, carrots, green beans, cauliflower, broccoli, and herbal tea of cranberries and vanilla that sits steaming in your hand
doesn't satisfy.
And you ask questions of the moist fresh air all evening
about what was, is, or will be
asking about intention
knowing that's it,
the intent to be
is everything.
And you write it,
this mundane
enfolded mystery.