Caliche. Great bird, woodsmoke, needle. Snake, owl. Nopal vibration.
Almost every day
of my life
I have wanted
to be filled.
By something:
a great bird, woodsmoke,
wild laughters,
an untethered
tongue.
When I’m on my back,
any yell
can be a needle,
any breath
works as thread.
On asphalt
or caliche,
in dirt,
my feet bare their crooked
hymns:
hoping to be entered.
I don’t own words
for every sound
I feel.
I don’t own words
for breath
I stuff back into my body
after loving
& not being loved.
but Who isn’t
in love with at least one
seam, a sound:
one vibration
of this world?
Ask any bolus of owls,
ask víboras.
Ask the nopales
of certainty
& joy.
But who owns
any certainty, really?
Any word?
& who still speaks
the languages
of víboras & caliche,
& who will reteach my body
that language
of great birds & nopal?
Copyright © 2018 by Joe Jiménez. Originally published in Poem-a-Day on September 4, 2018, by the Academy of American Poets.