Woodchuck Meditation
Elaine Frankonis
A chubby woodchuck
in the middle of an empty parking lot
stops to watch me walk in circles
around a June afternoon
awash in dandelion seeds
and gently dappled sky.
He twitches his nose,
ambles a few more steps
sits on his haunches,
rests his paws on his full belly
a curious and patient and satisfied
Buddha.
The soul needs its burrow,
the woodchuck says,
a warren to wend a way
through the solitary earth,
some private ground to hog,
a place safe to spend
that deep season of wonder.
And, with a fanciful last twitch,
Buddha leaves the spotlight,
his coat a slow and sensuous shimmer
along the grave pavement.
Without looking back,
he disappears into the grasses
between the shadowy sumac,
leaving me to wander
toward my own way
in.