O

Outside the Laundromat: A Forward

Rittenhouse Square, Philadelphia, 2008

In mottled cotton, shambling toe-heel, toe-heel,
Bass-ackwards
With Zen concentration and breathing down the neck 
Of the square’s
Path, sinking under the shards of bruised bone 
Tea- stained 
Petals: coral and salmon, mauve and plum, auberge
Fleshy pulp,
And crushed beneath him were the skins and juices of what
Had-been-so-lovely. 

Let us begin at the beginning with a man:
Mr. Chan, 
In red terry-cloth armbands, perambulating backward
Postures 
Discrete as stills of a film. Thus, in Rittenhouse every day,
Cells 
Rewind, muscles, the rectus femoris–say–habitually relaxed,
Tense. 
They say: backward motion unravels neuro-pathways readymade
Forged 
After punching out and before punching in, gliding daily 
To and fro
On the earth, from kiosk to square and back again. 

How shall we unlearn forward momentum? 
Ligaments 
Groan in protest, tripping backward, 
Like matter, 
Strolling towards a shadow of a black hole. Why,
Michael Jackson 
Would certainly have moon-walked like this at ninety.
“Why?” 
I cannot answer grief’s complaint. In Malaysian- made 
Sweat
Pants he practices the solo slo-mo shuffle.  Every day
Backward 
I think, as I watch, that perhaps walking backwards is akin
to Zohar–

Reserved for initiates of mystical traditions? Or do the aged 
Reverse-course
In order to escape the gravitational pull of
‘life’s opposite?’ 
(As the Hassidim say.) Just so, Mr. Chan arrives at the 
End 
Of the square, weaving between joggers,
Grief 
Has no map, no terminus, no compass, only
History 
Of a journey unfolding like “Shesshu’s Long Scroll.’
Backward.


Photo by Frank Busch on Unsplash

Chava Evans

Chava Evans is a rabbi and chaplain in the Washington DC area. She has three children.