View Cart Register

Home
News
Reviews
Publications
Blogs
Submit
Submission Guidelines
Contest Guidelines
Resources
Poets
Debrenee Adkisson
John Allman
Rane Arroyo
Keith Badowski
Judith Barrington
Ellen Bass
Claire Bateman
Marcia Black
Paula Brancato
Jennifer Campbell
Wendy Taylor Carlisle
Carol Carpenter
Susana H. Case
Catherine Chandler
David Chorlton
Alex Cigale
Kelly Clayton
Juliet Cook
Kathleen Dale
J. P. Dancing Bear
Janann Dawkins
William Doreski
George Drew
Rupert Fike
Alan Elyshevitz
Richard Fein
Marta Ferguson
Gary Fincke
Stewart Florsheim
Taylor Graham
John Grey
Rachel Hadas
Clarinda Harriss
Penny Harter
Donald M. Hassler
Peggy Heinrich
Dianna Henning
Michael Henson
David Brendan Hopes
Paul Hostovsky
Joseph Hutchison
One Clear Moment in August
Yoga
The Things That Carried Them
Michael Lee Johnson
Sean Kilpatrick
Burt Kimmelman
Robert S. King
Robert W. King
Diane Kistner
Greg Kosmicki
Mindy Kronenberg
Joy Ladin
Jennifer Lagier
Rustin Larson
Sean Lause
Gary Lehmann
Jack Lindeman
Duane Locke
Joanne Lowery
Iain Macdonald
Doug Martin
Timothy Martin
Catherine McGuire
Bruce McRae
Alexandra Oliver
Elsie Pankowski
Lee Passarella
Allan Peterson
Diana Pinckney
Susanna Rich
Brad Rose
Mark Saba
Dixie Salazar
Roy Scheele
Iris N. Schwartz
Jim Scutti
L. B. Sedlacek
George Seli
Marc J. Sheehan
Tovli Simiryan
Noel Smith
Laurie Soriano
Alexander Stachniak
Amanda Strand
Wally Swist
Gina M. Tabasso
Don Thackrey
Terry Ann Thaxton
Larry D. Thomas
Pamela Uschuk
Elizabeth Volpe
Rhian Waller
James R. Whitley
Sholeh Wolpé
Kathleen Worrell
Charles Wyatt
Leo Yankevich
Gerald Yelle
Cami Zinzi
About
Shop
Joseph Hutchison

Yoga

for Melody

The teacher guides their breath
into a depth his doesn’t like
at first. He lets her make
his lungs plump up, then

lead his body into Downward
Facing Dog. The class has seen
what her body does; but his—his
just isn’t made the same. Her glance

argues, All you lack is discipline.
Why? Those years in school,
outwitting bullies, making grades,
escaping into books—didn’t his body

bear him like a mule on its back?
Suddenly, tremors invade his arms—
but the teacher’s fierce. “Hold it. Hold it.”
He breathes into his shaky limbs

because she says he can . . . breathes
(it hits him) because she breathes
so beautifully. It must be her
he wants to breathe in! “Good,”

she announces. “Child’s Pose.”
He collapses with the rest, folded
around his secret. Or do the others
sense how intently he listens

as her naked feet brush the bare
wood floor? Now she halts, inches
from his tucked head. “Just relax,”
she says. And he tries. He tries!

“And don’t forget to breathe.”
 


Subscribe
 

Print this page
Copyright @2009, FutureCycle Press, All Rights Reserved.