I saw your familiar head in the grocery store
cast in grey plastic resin and sitting, of all places,
on top of a grass-skirted display labeled "Tiki Bar"
Buddha, they made a joke of you
They put you in a silly, south seas,
tropical-drink-themed
party tableau
Maybe you didn't mind, as you are an awake Buddha,
but I am a groggy Christian,
and my Buddhist husband was grieving his father,
and I couldn't bear to see you like that
I did what any good Samaritan would do
for a Buddha left to languish on the Tiki-Samsara highway
I set you carefully in my shopping cart
between the frozen pot pies and the organic bananas
You cast your compassionate gaze on everything
as we traveled past pool supplies and pet food,
through the land of entertainment centers and leather sectionals
There was no inflatable bodhi tree in the seasonal aisle
but we found an empty sofa table that looked like an altar
I placed you in the center of it and made a quick bow.
The man at the seafood counter pretended not to see us
You looked happier there,
bigger than before and more finely wrought
you seemed at peace, finally
after so many years of infirmity
The sea of impermanence rose up and carried me away from you,
toward the check-out and the parking lot,
the evening meal and the funeral home
Attention Kroger shoppers:
Great is the matter of life and death
Thirteen items or less is sufficient
Do not waste this moment
2 comments:
most lovely -- thank you!
and thank you Rev. Rambler!
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