The Edge of the Continent: The Desert
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About this ebook
Jacqueline Suskin
Jacqueline Suskin has composed over forty thousand poems with her ongoing improvisational writing project, Poem Store. She is the author of six books, including Help in the Dark Season. Her work has been featured in the New York Times, the Atlantic, and Yes! magazine. She lives in Northern California. For more, see jacquelinesuskin.com.
Read more from Jacqueline Suskin
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The Edge of the Continent - Jacqueline Suskin
Joshua Tree
When fools forget the bounty
of the desert and call it dead,
your body reminds them
of dogged life. Your shaggy limbs
reach in every direction as you spread
your family throughout the valley.
Against the wind you shudder and bend.
You have an uncanny ability
to cradle the moon. Your white
flowers are cups of air, bells
holding thousands of the blackest
pupils, seeds that have seen
time shift like an ocean.
I kneel close and kiss the one
white spot on your gnarled trunk.
Grandmother, with your sturdy hide,
your lineage exalts the endless sky.
Desert Bear
I know how to heal myself.
In solitude, my routine
of waking up with the sun,
writing, and singing.
To memorize the names of plants.
To walk a familiar gate, softly
as not to disturb the delicate
growth that somehow withstands
wind and heat, day on end.
No one can see me.
I take many deep breaths and never hurry.
I sleep when I feel like sleeping.
What comes out of me in this buoyed state
is the voice of the sacred cosmos.
I hear it start to build
after three days in the desert.
Deep warm sand and cool stone.
They say there is an extensive aquifer
below this landscape, wetness
in the dark. There is a bear who lives
in the boulders. She is me.
Here, she is in her finest season.
Alone Together
The first year I came to the ranch
a few days after Bryan died. I drove
right by the place on I-5 where we lost him.
It could have been any of us.
In a new way, everything felt like chance.
I picked up Kyle at the Ontario airport
and we were in love for a week
before we started tearing each other apart.
He’d just gone through a divorce
and in our bereavement we decided
to split each other open. It was silent
at first and then I threw my camera at him.
We learned to write our books
on opposite sides of the house
and only get together for meals.
After all that time with wind and sand,
when we finally parted ways
we were grateful to understand
the weight of grief. The way it works itself
like a broken rib loose in a soft-sided animal,
ready to settle back in or be ripped out.
Better without too much touch.
Watermelon and Oranges
In the morning I eat
watermelon and oranges.
I’m barefoot but wearing
a thick wool coat. I forget
what day it is, what season,
what chores call me out into the yard.
I give rinds to the chickens,
drop seeds for the