Rikuama
I Am Squash Girl,
the one who is always
pregnant-looking.
See My big round belly,
My long skinny neck,
My little pointy head.
(What's wrong with the child?)
I play in the water,
Mother East's daughter.
I float and I laugh.
I play in the sand,
dig My toes in the mud.
I curl My green hair
round My restless fingers.
I wind tendrils of vines,
green rings for My busy fingers,
twisting them around.
I wind the tsi kuri, the colorful eye.
I honor the four directions of earth,
wearing their colors wound up on sticks
tied in My hair with a ribbon and feather.
I'm a strange girl who only grows fatter,
so certain, mysterious,
Virgin self-fertile.
What grows in My womb?
At last I Am womban.
I tattoo My skin
with a shaman's patterns,
and I take no man.
I make My own wild way.
Once I was tender,
once juicy and yielding.
Could I have been taken
like the others, and eaten,
become cup or two dippers,
scooped out, disemboweled,
a sacrifice?
Now it's too late.
I Am hard in My laughter.
Whole and free,
I dance and I rattle.
Alone, full of emptiness,
I bring joy to the circle.
Pregnant with rhythm,
I dance a life sacred
beyond all uses.
The light and the shadow
play harmony on My curves.
I Am Riku'ama, First Mother.
Humans cling to My cauldron
like dry fragile vines.
Mystery is My belly
rocking big with laughter.
© Tamara Rasmussen 2018