This animosity has nothing to do with God or religion or faith. I’m a cradle Catholic; play keyboard/pipe organ at several different denominational churches every weekend; and say prayers every morning and night (and at various times during the day). The reason I dislike Sundays: they come before Mondays and the start of another work week.
Monday through Friday, I feel like Sisyphus—pushing that boulder uphill until I reach the summit on Friday. On Sunday, that fucker rolls back to the bottom of the hill, and I start trudging down to start the whole process all over again.
Marie Howe writes about a boulder . . .
Before
by: Marie Howe
The boulder once dust, will be dust again,
but today, so filled with its own heaviness,
it can’t hear the grunts of the men who push and roll it
to the mouth of the tomb,
and it can’t yet conceive how else it might be moved.
Howe is talking about mortality here, echoing the blessing that’s repeated every Ash Wednesday: Remember that you are dust, and to dust you shall return. Howe’s boulder has consciousness. It knows its own weight, but it doesn’t know all the back-breaking effort it took to get it to that tomb entrance.
I’m feeling the weight of that boulder tonight as I prepare to head into another week of teaching and library work, and I’m not excited. It always feels as though I’m just starting to relax as the weekend comes to an end. I even took a little nap this afternoon, which is a luxury I rarely allow myself. Now it’s almost 10 p.m., and the boulder is starting its downward descent.
Don’t get me wrong. I love working at the library, and there are aspects of teaching that really energize me. However, the heaviness of the next five days is overwhelming. Plus (and most church musicians can back me up on this fact), the Lenten/Easter season adds extra stress and weight to life. Palm Sunday is in seven days, and then Holy Week, with all the bells, whistles, smoke, and chants. In two weeks, I will look like a refugee from a George Romero flick.
I guess the takeaway from tonight’s post is that I’m tired. Tired of the daily grind. And politics. And President 47. And Republicans. And war. And divisiveness. 47 has ruined basically the last ten years of life in the United States (and the world). If I could just stay home, write poems, and take my puppy for walks, I would. (With the price of oil and gas rising every day, that’s pretty much all I’ll be able to afford to do.)
This weekend, I watched a movie starring Michael Caine as a dying Thomas Pynchon-esque writer. It was titled Best Sellers. One of Michael Caine’s catchphrases in the film is “bullshite.” (I don’t think I need to translate that for you.)
Allow me to say this: I’m tired of all the bullshite going on in my country and around the globe.
The only bright spot this Sunday was the Zoom poetry workshop I led this evening, with some of my best friends participating.
Saint Marty wrote the following poem in workshop tonight. It’s about being lost and found . . .
Lost on an Island
by: Martin Achatz
Some people think it’s impossible
to get lost on an island, with all
its coast to guide you home to
where you began. I’m here to tell you
you it’s easy to get lost on a piece
of land surrounded on all sides
by water, fresh or salt, that water
isn’t a street sign or highway
marker telling you how far to
the next McDonald’s or gas station
or rest area. Water encourages
lostness with its waves and currents
and horizons. If anything, water
wants to turn us all into Odysseus
sailing 20 years before he crawls
onto Ithaca’s shores, driven
by a yearn for the arms of Penelope
or wet nose, rough tongue of Argos
waiting by the palace door those two
decades. Even on an island, yes,
it’s easy to get lost, be lost, stay lost.
See that beach there? I bet it’s named
after somebody who got lost and built
a shack on the sands and called it
home.



