Short, emotional piece about my time in Africa as a health educator. |
Rain on the tin roof of an old mud hut Singing in the nude with the windows shut Despite the heat, for privacy's sake The roaches and lizards are starting to wake She reads them a story of old Russian Czars Plays Joni Mitchell on her guitar A flashlight lights the pebbled path To the tiny shed where she takes her bath Goblet, washcloth, shampoo, soap Bucket of rainwater, low on hope Nobody listens to her desperate plea "Protection from Malaria and HIV! Nutrition for children! For God's sake don't smoke! I know you're all hungry and hopelessly broke, but take one day for your child's vaccination!" The rumbling feet on the dirt of creation say "This is the way we have done things for years And just who do you think you are to shed tears For us? As the dust Collects in her hair through the taxi window, She can't help but stare at the goiter near bursting from a woman's throat, She lectures on iodized salt but the goat Bleating from the trunk drowns out her sermon And damn it she's tired of sleep among vermon And fuck it if nobody here understands That she's holding elixir of life in her hands And screw it she wants to be screwed til she's numb And forget that she ever once witnessed the humble eyes of Africa. But back in the air-conditioning The world has lost its old positioning And all she can hear are the songs that were played And all she can think is that she should have stayed And all she can see is the dust in the road And all she can hope is that those seeds she sowed Grew and fed someone If only she knew. A computer screen and a cold diet coke A cigarette she knows she shouldn't smoke Whirring fan, vibrating cell the voices she knows all too well She never sings naked anymore nor pores over volumes of forgotten lore nor cries, nor feels nor reaches out nor cares nor loves nor screams nor shouts But waits for inspiration from the urgent call of a beating drum. |