We are continuing in this issue our ReCollection section, looking back through The BeZine past issues and blog posts in this, our tenth year. This poem comes from The BeZine Volume 3 Issue 2, on November 15, 2016, which had the theme of “Loving Kindness.” Our Founding Editor, Jamie Dedes, z”l, wrote this poem in 2013 and was very fond of it. It seems a fitting closing to both this month’s ReCollection section and the June 2023 issue (Volume 10 Issue 2).

From Pictures section of OpenHistory under Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 Unported license
Wabi Sabi
if only i knew what the artist knows about the great perfection in imperfection i would sip grace slowly at the ragged edges of the creek kiss the pitted face of the moon befriend the sea though it can be a danger embrace the thunder of a waterfall as if its strains were a symphony prostrate myself atop the rank dregs on the forest floor, worshiping them as compost for fertile seeds and the breeding ground for a million small lives if i knew what the artist knows, then i wouldn’t be afraid to die, to leave everyone i would be sure that some part of me would remain present and that one day you would join me as the wind howling on its journey or the bright moment of a flowering desert if i knew what the artist knows, i would surely respond soul and body to the echo of the Ineffable in rough earthy things i would not fear decay or work left undone i would travel like the river through its rugged, irregular channels comfortable with this life; imperfect, impermanent, and incomplete
©2023 Jamie Dedes
All rights reserved

Ay, Jamie, you are sorely missed, your soft and gentle wisdom. Yes, soon we will all join you.
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