
Three years ago, sudden and massive waters dropped a generous array of boulders near the newly cut riverbank. I’ve rolled these stones into a labyrinth and placed a recycled angel named Mary Magdalene at the center. Her arm fell off occasionally, but a fellow angel stopped by and glued it permanently in place.
Rafters appreciate Mary as they drift by, snapping thin lines through the air, hoping to catch and release innocent trout. Darth Vader and the Hulk stand guard, and I’ve added reading glasses.
Lately, besides sticks, stones, and angels, I’ve been drawn to shattered mirrors, discarded jewelry, and certain words–the ones used to deliver sucker punches: Bastard (someone born to an unwed mother); Bitch (a female dog); Fuck (to make love); God (a concept used to elevate oneself and control others).
“Wait!” God exclaims. “Don’t put us on that list.”
I shrug. “You put yourselves on.”
“Hmmm. Well then, we’re taking ourselves off.”
“Good luck,” I shrug again. “I cross you off. You crop back up.”
“Fascinating,” God says. “What’s that about?”
“Consciousness. We’re at war. URGES. LIES. Still small voices. It’s Jiminy Cricket vs. Pleasure Island. We don’t want to humble ourselves and do the work necessary to be real.”
I step back from my collage and admire how the jagged and the smooth interact. The reconfigured shards reflect my splintered image.
“We love what you’ve done with your imperfections,” God says.
“I rather like being cracked and shiny,” I admit. “Is that okay with you?”
An explosion of unadulterated laughter threatens to jiggle things loose. The glue isn’t quite dry.
“Mind?” God howls and contorts into a string of Mardi Gras beads, baubles, bones, and tubes of epoxy. “Glue us in, baby,” they chant. “Glue us in and hang us down near Mary.”
“But it’s dangerous down there. Floods. Trespassers. Unrelenting sun,” I warn.
In fact, my angel’s outer layer is peeling from constant UV exposure, and I could lose her to flooding or vandalism.
“Then hang us high,” they laugh. “We’ve seen a flood or two in our day.” They begin singing an old camp tune. “You put your right arm in. You put your right arm out, you put your right arm in…. Let’s go!”
I throw my arm over God’s shoulder, and we croon our way to the labyrinth. To Mary. To the river.
We put our whole selves in. We put our whole selves out. We put our whole selves in, and then we shake them all about. We do the hokey pokey, and we turn ourselves around.
And maybe. Just maybe, that’s what it’s all about.
❤️❤️❤️🦋
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Can’t help but wonder if you’ve been on Highway 212 recently, going north to cross the bridge over the Yellowstone River, and seen the sign about the hokey pokey. It says (said? can’t remember if it was still there a week ago) something like “Was addicted to the Hokey Pokey but have turned myself about.”
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Ha! I’ll keep an eye out :). Hope all is well with you, Teressa.
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