Pacing the labyrinth
It’s
strange that so soon you are led towards the centre
then
unexpectedly flung to the rim, like life I guess;
just
when you think you have everything
in
place, you discover the map is upside down.
It’s
hard to stay focussed, keep your pace slow
and
measured. Soon I’m identifying species of grass,
the
ratio of flatweed to turf, assessing the bricklayer’s
craft
at laying down edges. Was he meditative,
a
mantra circling in his thoughts? And the mowing…
is
the gardener a zen practitioner? What flows
through
her mind as she paces the maze,
swinging
her Victor on its precise path?
Wrens
mock my progress, skittering Euclidean
geometry
across this ancient page. I pace, trying
to
unwrap my plastic skin of anxieties, timing
my
steps to reach enlightenment before dinner.
The
labyrinth pulls me in and pushes me
away
like tides under a full-bellied moon.
And
then… the centre. Inevitable but still
somehow
satisfying, a tiny accomplishment.
My
feet flatten into the grass, a reciprocal acceptance,
the
eight tiny topiaries somehow more beautiful
from
directly above. Perhaps this is how the
sun feels.
I
look up to watch it setting, a graceful diva’s exit.
As
I walk away
my
steps are slower
and
I notice.
really a lot in your text... but I'm crazy about your image
ReplyDeleteThanks! It's from the Botanic Gardens in Adelaide - the statue had been taken away for cleaning and someone left their thongs on the pedestal - I couldn't resist!
DeleteThanks Lizz!
ReplyDelete