Outlasting
Beauty
i
If we come to find
something wrong
with every fellow
man we meet,
what are we
to ask ourselves?
What constitutes
disappointment
turned so
inside-out?
It seems to me
there are
two kinds of wrong.
One endearing,
and the other
defeating.
I’ve sifted through
myself for
which is which.
The endearing wrong
is rooted in experience,
misfortune, origin.
It is beyond
one’s control.
The defeating wrong,
I’m afraid,
is a confluence
of ego, mind,
and
unconsciousness;
a refusal
of responsibility
for one’s own
vibration,
an imbalance
that in breaking
the circle
consequentially
maims the flower.
How could a daisy
love you not?
If a circle
made of
spirit
can summon
the dead,
then
mine is a beauty
fashioned from
heartbreak.
And so I’ve begun
to notice things
that weep,
or appear to weep.
Acacia trees letting go
of their pink petals,
the condensation
from a steel pipe,
a sky too full
of rain.
What if
I
no longer
need to be
loved?
Would I
finally
be free?
With a youthful body
beyond my reach
I’m no longer
baited
by beauty;
a standard
I can’t meet.
Happiness is
a grace
after all.
No longer
a target,
too nuanced
for arrows;
I am more
mandala.
Tuned,
circular,
self-sustaining,
with a sun
at it’s center.
ii
“My son had a breakdown,”
said the woman
with a bee keeper-like
sun bonnet.
She hovered over
my deck chair
where I’d come
with my book of poetry
so as not to appear
simply sun-seeking.
Her shadow
superseded me
as she came closer
and added tentatively,
“But he’s better now.”
Her absence
of self assurance
unsettled me.
I immediately wanted
to know more
but contained my
curiosity,
tinged by a purple
aberrant
half smile.
I always feel
more than I show.
My son had a breakdown.
But he’s better now.
Her words rang in my brain
a broken cathedral bell.
How am I better now?
I wondered.
What is this
miraculous recuperation
one sentence away from
my own
asymmetric harrow?
iii
I outlasted beauty.
Now
I am an abstract
painting on the wall
in a museum
depicting someone
who loved
another
more than himself;
once
stolen by Nazis,
recovered
and displayed
as proof
of my heart’s
progress.
Peter Valentyne
May 29th, 2019