Keeping It All Afloat
Keeping It All Afloat is available for purchase from Barnes & Noble, Amazon, Bookshop, and from your local, independent book sellers.
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Through vivid encounters with creatures of land, sea, and air in Mexico’s Yucatán Peninsula, the poet weaves memory and reflection into a reckoning with joy, loss, and her own place in a damaged world. The book takes its title from words by poet Audre Lorde: “Only by learning to live in harmony with your contradictions can you keep it all afloat.”
“Ingrid Wendt’s poems vibrate with a pulse for our endurance: a sensory poet’s innate negative capability. Wendt shines her language on classic verities of truth and beauty while still bearing witness to horror and grief. Sometimes the poet is at “the wet, level edge of the world.” With understated playfulness, she takes us into the Yucatán jungle’s pyrotechnics of berries and leaves. Starburst recognitions! Her precision and observation reveal hidden miracles.”
~ Anne Waldman, author of Mesopotopia
“With tenderness and awe, Wendt’s poems recreate the splendor of a tropical jungle on the Yucatán coast. Wendt captures the cacophony (and mating!) of birds, the chirping of nearly transparent lizards, and the dazzling fish in undersea hush. She brings a moral reverence, with poem after poem presenting the complex balance of human interaction with the natural world. This is a profound and memorable work!”
-Barbara Ras, author of The Blues of Heaven
Excerpts from Keeping It All Afloat
ON THE NATURE OF BUTTING HEADS
What could be sweeter than breakfast on the palm-fringed
terrace, so you set down your bowl of jungle fruit
and dart inside for coffee. And, shit,
if the Long-Tailed Grackle hasn’t darted faster—out
of nohere!—is pissed
you’re back before he can snatch a bite.
But does he fly away? Nope. One hop,
he’s on the stucco wall nearby,
clicks and clucks and cocks his head in your direction,
flies to the top of the wooden ramada just a few
feet farther, his rasping snare drum of a throat tracking
the seconds, his yellow eyes waiting for you
to slip up again. Never say die. And when at last
he resorts to scolding, oh my, every jet-black feather
stands on end, he plumps up twice his normal size and
a great, low roar begins, a whole-body shudder, a stomach
rumble shivering, quivering as it rises out his open beak.
Such unflagging cacophony, and all from just one mouth!
King of the morning, he thinks you’ll bow to his command.
And can you blame him, you foolish trespasser into his realm?
You, whose rental house was plopped right on top
of old-growth guanabana trees. You evil bringer and taker-
away of a pittance—a tiny pittance—of
reparation. Fruit in a bowl. And tomorrow you’ll do it again.
AWAKENED TOO EARLY, I CONSIDER THE NATURE OF BEAUTY
Again this morning the same Tropical Mockingbird (in-between
flitting from branch to branch, no leaves to be seen) pours out
non-stop every tune its DNA-programmed brain can sing:
trills of warblers, trills of canaries, house finch tremolos,
coloraturas of house wrens and even
birds who never venture this far south: heavenly solos
that could be taken for glad
tidings—Look! The sun!—that could be brave
refusals to echo my own despair of a world headed
down the path of destruction: bird
who only yesterday chased away the larger, fatter,
Yellow-bellied Kiskadee, claiming
all these thousands of berries for its very own, though clearly
no bird stomach could have that much room. Cruel
bird, whose California cousin I once watched
peck to death a nest of newly-hatched mourning doves,
then skedaddle. How
can a bird who sings with the voices of cherubim
be so horrible? This
I ponder, though I know better:
beauty and goodness are not always on the same team.
Bless this bird who has no notion of savagery.
Bless each holy interlude of my forgetting.
IF, ON THE MENU, GROUPER
didn’t appear, or when it did, the words of warning
facing extinction were right next to the price
If tourists could look past the lure of exotic
If Grouper were not so tasty, flaky-firm, and almost no bones
If pesos didn’t revolve around Grouper, nor lives
of cooks and waiters with families of six in one room
If the fiction of plentiful didn’t slide with such ease from tongues
If anyone dared to question
If Grouper never made courtship sounds and didn’t
gather each year from hundreds of miles around
If undersea microphones were never designed to eavesdrop for
days on end to the world’s largest dance of the most intricate pairing
of spotted, slowly changing reds and browns circling, spiraling, swirling and coupling
If overfishing at sites of mating did not threaten
If overfishing meant breaking a law and the penalties, harsh
If beauty and wonder could put food on the table
If conscience could shelter each head
If, in our fragmented minds, opposing realities
never dangled, like these sentences
like the future of our world
If the lures of hope were never
Blue Morpho
As when – moments before your eyes
closed that one last time, you opened them wide, your face
the face of the morning sky when the sun at last
crests the far
eastern edge of our world – as when I asked
what do you see and your voice was luminous,
yearning – “Sanctuary! Sanctuary!” – something
just beyond the blank, pale-green hospital wall, and then
“Birds,” you whispered. “Birds!”
As when I asked if you wanted to go there,
As when you nodded,
As when I said “Okay. It’s okay. You can go,”
As when you sighed and turned to smile and we kissed
three times, sweet
flutters of butterfly wings – just yesterday, here in Akumál,
where for the first time in oh, so many adventures I’m here
without you, I never dreamed at the dive shop to find
a pair of bark-mottled, gray-brown wings (unremarkable
but for their size: big as my palm!) frantically scanning
top to bottom the whole big plate glass window holding them
back from the blazing green jungle beyond. Not
thinking of you at all, right then, I cupped closed wings
in my hands and – gently, firmly, with thumb and index finger –
kept them closed and rushed them out the open door where Oh!
they were Blue! – pulsing, shimmering, open – Blue! – iridescent
splash of sky returning to sky. Good bye, Good bye,
You Beauty! My Love! I’m here. You’re there. For now.
PRAYER
~On retreat in Mexico, news arrives from the North
I’ve lifted my face to the great night sky, but any wonder
I used to feel is gone. And what are the songs
Of birds, who once brought joy? Nothing but blind instinct
The staking of claims: which parts of the jungle are theirs
And theirs alone: ways to find each other
Over earth’s constant, low hum, fierce wind in the palms
Yesterday starting like any other, waving goodbye
Lunch buckets in hands, and the crack
Crack of the gun that does not stop
And the blood
And the children who never
*
Water, great giver and taker, help me to remember
How to cradle wonder and still bear witness to horror and grief
How to let protest and beauty share the same beats of the heart
*
All the way from the wet, level edge of the world
The long, long path of the rising moon
Shimmers and streams
Right to your feet and mine
No matter on which shore, whose continent, we stand.
Nature photographs and written content © Ingrid Wendt, unless otherwise cited.