Live Virtual Group Session: 6pm EDT August 31st 2020

Twenty people from Canada, England, Greece, ME, PA, MI, NY, WA, and RI chatted in their geography and, with their presence, showed an interest in puzzling together possible meanings in Lucille Cliftonโ€™s โ€blessing the boats.โ€ This poem, written entirely in small cap and sans punctuation, furnished a gentle feeling for many participants, who heard โ€œa prayer for these times,โ€ โ€œan Irish prayer with โ€˜the wind at your back,โ€โ€™ a blessing, a sendoff to another place, perhaps even to a time and place beyond death. We selected this poem mindful of the transition of going into September, into the fall, and โ€“ for many โ€“ into the school year. In the shadow of the poem, each of us identified a transition in our own lives, envisioning ourselves collectively โ€œin our boatsโ€. As someone observed: โ€œwe are now beyond our initial understanding of what COVID is all aboutโ€, getting โ€œglimpses or brightnessโ€ and yet still navigating the unknown. The word โ€œmayโ€ (appearing four times in the body of poem) suggests uncertainty, possibility, permission and, in that way, allows readers a freedom to sail the poem at their own pace and understand as they will. For some, the poem exuded โ€œgentle simplicityโ€. One person offered that water in literature suggests baptism and beginnings.

Many highlighted the physicality embedded in the text. The word โ€œlipโ€ (the lip of our understanding), was a stumbling block, a โ€œhaltingโ€ for some and, for others, an evocation of an edge, a cusp, a beginning. The โ€œbackโ€ makes us think of a โ€œconcrete bodyโ€. One person mentioned that she had expected to read the reciprocal โ€œlove you backโ€ but remembered to read closely (narrativeโ€™s MO) and read that the โ€œyouโ€ (addressed in the poem) could turn from the wind and expect the wind to โ€œlove your back.โ€ Oh, the many discoveries we make when we close read! Another participant expressed their experience of physical sensuousness that included feeling hands laid on the back of passenger(s) embarking from a place as nebulous as โ€œthisโ€ to an unnamed โ€œthat.โ€  The word โ€œinnocenceโ€ called to many, who paired the word with ideas of trust, energy, and the protection of not knowing.  

One participant remembered spending time, as an aspirant to medical practice, at St. Maryโ€™s, the geography pointed to by the poet Lucille Clifton, steering a craft on the โ€œlipโ€ of waves in Chesapeake Bay. Like others he brought into the discussion the trust needed to turn oneโ€™s back on the wind and allow/expect the wind to love your back.

The prompt โ€œWrite about turning from the face of fearโ€ brought creative writing that described snorkeling in the Pacific Ocean; feeling fear (โ€œcold, pressing โ€œ) by night and day and respite from this fear that prayer brings; choice/options depicted by Door 1 and Door 2; and references to current events and the promulgation of a fear-based culture. Together, we reflected on how fear takes on different forms, including based on the stories we tell ourselves and others. ย  As we adjourned (knowing we will have a holiday hiatus on September 7 and be together again on September 14), participants chatted words and phrases expressing what they were taking with them this evening: beauty, bravery, gentle transition, hope, letting my back be loved, stillness, surfing gently, and trust. Thank you for sailing with us, and see you soon!

Participants are warmly encouraged to share what you wrote below (โ€œLeave a Replyโ€), to keep the conversation going here, bearing in mind that the blog of course is a public space where confidentiality is not assured.

Also, we would love to learn more about your experience of these sessions, so if youโ€™re able, please take the time to fill out a follow-up survey of one to two quick questions!

Please join us for our next session Wednesday, September 2nd at 12pm EDT, with more times listed on our Live Virtual Group Sessions page.


blessing the boats
BY LUCILLE CLIFTON

                                    (at St. Mary's)

may the tide
that is entering even now
the lip of our understanding
carry you out
beyond the face of fear
may you kiss
the wind then turn from it
certain that it will
love your back     may you
open your eyes to water
water waving forever
and may you in your innocence
sail through this to that


Lucille Clifton, "blessing the boats" 
from Blessing the Boats: New and Selected Poems 1988-2000. 
Copyright ยฉ 2000 by Lucille Clifton.