(Poem) Being Here Now by Harriet Ann Ellenberger

Midwife clay image from cave-shrine of Eileithyia at Inatos, near Tsoutsouros, Crete, dated 9th-6th century BCE

As earth warms
and her ice fields melt
and the skeletal bones of her crust shift
and her hot core cooks up something new,
human structures collapse
along with the Siberian permafrost.

Being here is like being born:
everything is dark and tumultuous
and you don’t know where you’re headed
and you didn’t ask for this
but this, whatever it is, is already happening
and it’s too late to bail out now.

Call the midwife,
Call the female shaman,
Call 911Multiverse,
We have to learn to let go.

[Author’s Note: 3 July 2020. Thanks to Jack Dempsey for sending me the photo, which he describes as “a little clay bowl crafted in post-Minoan Crete: likely, a midwife holding and comforting a woman giving water-birth” (from the cave-shrine of Eileithyia, goddess-patron of mothers, at Inatos, near Tsoutsouros, Crete, dated 9th˗6th cent. BCE). His main website on Minoan Crete is Ancientlights.org.]

(Meet Mago Contributor) Harriet Ann Ellenberger.



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2 thoughts on “(Poem) Being Here Now by Harriet Ann Ellenberger”

  1. Re Harriet: Learning how to move through these uncertain times with the knowledge that the earth is changing on levels that most of us can’t comprehend is a herculean task and a necessary one… letting go is a positive outcome…focusing on now helps me keep my ATTENTION and INTENTION aligned…

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