Poetry

“The Visitation,” “The Whys of Flight,” and “At the 24/7 Yoga Studio”

The Visitation

This morning the divine is wearing my Land's End robe

and demanding chai. It seems unwise to deny her appetite,

given I don't often wake up with her, but usually spring

from my bed like some ludicrous toy that hones

my own craving for my gray comforter and smooth sheets

I need to leave to come back to, famished, the way I wait

to wash my salty yoga mat, alchemize from pheromones

to frankincense. My constancy, like hers, not discipline,

but devotion; the void turns into its object, an infinite recursion.

I brew her a cup and one for myself that I drink from my best mug,

marbled in ochre and blue. Today, I refuse to go hungry.

The Whys Of Flight

Why is security —electronics, liquid, feet, pose—

different in every airport, every trip,

yet the Starbucks-adjacent escalator

 

to the C Concourse at ORD always

reeks cilantro though it’s miles

from any taqueria? Our flight attendant

 

used to be a cheerleader;

she keeps referring to the air as the                 sky

like it’s a visible and discrete destination.

 

No smoking in the sky! As we're in a town

on a map and not an aircraft,     enclosed.

I refresh my gum by reimagining it as custard:

 

cool and creamy topped with coconut whip;

adjust my bladder to shift it to a gentle presence,

nearly imperceptible, and wonder when people

 

like that youngish dude in 17C

self-deprecatingly call themselves old,

do they realize they are dissing

 

all their peers, present and future?

When my spouse asks the woman

on the aisle if she is going to the bath-

 

room, as if she’s wetting her seat

we both blink at him, momentarily confused

by the absurd and unexpected intimacy

 

of his poorly worded                   query.

They say that any given moment

a plane is likely to be off-course,

 

but, nevertheless, nearly always

lands exactly where planned,

a parable, I suppose,

 

about trusting processes

and the logical impossibility,

or at least avoidable possibility,

 

of wasting one’s time and life,

wisdom so easily forgotten

when touching the earth.

At The 24/7 Yoga Studio

It is what it is                            our ankles or toes may need a wax.

we’re all right.                                             Our pedicures may chip;                 we do not care

                     Our bra straps may slip, but                                                 it’s an iterative process

                                                             we sweat lavender, rosemary and myrrh                                                                                  

                                                                                    at the 24/7 yoga studio

the outline of our nipples may show,

our yoga pants may reveal camel toe,                                              but we don’t know what we don’t know

                                         We don’t need to perform the full expression of the pose

                                                                                  at the 24/7 yoga studio                       

                                                              we can lie in savasana all night long

the sepia gurus in the corner                                                                    at the 24/7 yoga studio

don’t know our name,                                                                                      but it is what it is

the leonine instructor with the giant water bottle             at the 24/7 yoga studio

does not know our name                                                                              and we are all right with that

we may forget our own names                                                               and do not care so long as we are

                                                                                 at the 24/7 yoga studio.

About the Author

Julie Benesh

Julie Benesh is author of the poetry collection INITIAL CONDITIONS and the poetry chapbook ABOUT TIME. She has been published in Tin House, Another Chicago Magazine, Florida Review, and many other places, earned an MFA from Warren Wilson College, and received an Illinois Arts Council Grant. She currently lives in Chicago and holds a PhD in human and organizational systems.