WILDERNESS WITHIN
An Ode to the Gila
River/Wilderness
by Katherine West
I have heard that one cannot recognize a soulmate until the soul inhabits
the body. I have heard that ancient
shamans practiced "soul retrieval."
I have heard desalmado in
Spanish, to be unsouled. We don't seem
to have this verb in English, and yet we have the disease.
I have lived in wild places, but I have not been wild. I have lived in the jungle where there is no
sky. I have lived in mountains where sky
speaks in spectrums of color and mackerel textures. I have lived in dim canyons waiting for sun
and avalanche. My body lived there,
waiting for its soul, its soulmate.
I have heard there's a gene for belief.
I have heard it's a matter of neurotransmitters. But God is not my problem, not my equation to
balance. I am the telegraph operator, the
receiver and sender of messages, of codes, of SOS.
I have spent years, no, decades tuned to the wrong frequency, to static, to
a litany of commercials for Self. I
spent one week with the Gila River, one week with uninterrupted rippling over
stones and pooling into eddies, into the empty wells of my life, filling them
day and night until they overflowed and drowned everything that was not
soul. Soul. Savage.
Wild. Wilderness. Soul.
Soulmate.
* * * * *
Katherine West lives in Southwest New Mexico, near the Gila
Wilderness, where she writes poetry about the soul-importance of wilderness and
performs it with her musician husband, Yaakov. She has written three
collections of poetry: The Bone Train, Scimitar Dreams, and Riddle, as well as one novel, Lion Tamer. Her poetry has appeared in journals such as Lalitamba, Bombay Gin, and New Verse News, which recently
nominated her poem, And Then the Sky for a Pushcart Prize.
Nice!!!
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