If I am The Mother
then I am holy. Made of moonbeams and shadows, darkness and light, questioned and answered, lost and retrieved;
discovered remains
If I am The Mother
then I am a reflection, a depiction, an inflexion of a cosmos in bliss and chaos, birth and destitution; a primordial sound unleashed to form planet, life, and
you and me
If I am The Mother
then I am fermented in humanity, and sour the illusions of precipices we’re told that
we cannot cross
Cross the trinity of three’s and return to
the magic of all
If I am The Holy Mother
then holy are we. Us, stardust and tree remains, bones made of crushed shells from epochs of touch from
wind and sea
Break down humble kin and enter ancient caves decorated with mountain mint—find source and hear visions;
we are prophets too
If I am The Mother
then, cups and smudge bowls overflow with lavender to remind us that we are born into
a dream that is the universe
Plants and moon teach us that holiness is our birthright
If I am The Mother
The Healthy Mother, who does not reign supreme but prays by ancestral fires for the living, the lived, and the dead, then,
no one is left behind
Her wormholes and subterfuge move easily throughout galaxies until she rests;
rest is holy
Vulva laid bare and dick tucked; her mountainous breasts lactate into the
bluest skies
Don’t kiss her feet, instead,
bow to The Mother in us all
If I am The Mother
then we must climb pathless mounds and fall down bathroom drains full of hair, and sit alongside the young and old who
have top surgery
If I am The Mother
holy in nature, then, we are birthing, aborted, infertile, womb-less, womb-unwanted, double-wombed, bold, vulnerable, caring, pretty ugly,
thirsty and hungry
If I am The Mother
cleanse in the stream near my house, where the Sinixt once lived—where they still
live
and wash where the salmon ran, and Japanese internment camp survivors and Doukhobor ghosts
sip from glacial waters
If I am The Mother
holy as sin, sinfully holy, Talmud divided, Dead Sea Scrolls
faint
then, the side of the temple that she stands on should not matter; life is what we all
reach for
If I am The Mother
there is no other but you, holy beast, tired maniac, isolated soul—who forgets to
tend to others
They’s and them’s tremble because of us, his and hers, while
The Mother carries us all
Holy is The Mother
gender non-conforming, who beckons to the lost ones to search their hearts for
hope
The universe is a wonder
If I am The Mother
wander inside dark, clotty menses spread across
the night sky
and wonder no more about who is right nor who is wrong, who knows best, nor why men try to dominate
life
They’s and them’s,
take pity on us
If I am The Mother
you are holy, holier than my struggle to
forgive
Holier than lost boys at sea, who forget to make offerings to
MA
If I am The Mother
then, holy are we, grains of sand on beaches of eternity, who fear being shaped into sand castles and loathe
surrender
If I am The Mother
then, holy am I, a pebble,a grist of rice in a universe of plenty;
eat me whole
~ ~ ~
If I am The Mother
discovered remains
you and me
we cannot cross
the magic of all
wind and sea
we are prophets too
a dream that is the universe
no one is left behind
bluest skies
rest is holy
bow to The Mother in us all
thirsty and hungry
have top surgery
live
sip glacial waters
faint
reach for
tend to others
The Mother carries us all
hope
the night sky
life
take pity on us
forgive
surrender
*“The Mother” does not exclusively denote a birthing person/s or “feminine characteristics” but an infinite and magnificent force/s —neither good nor bad—that runs through the universe, our planet, hearts and bodies.

BIO: Rebecca Rogerson she/her is an anti-oppression-based scholar, author, folk herbalist and educator. She lived and worked for two decades in this capacity in South Africa, Botswana and Tkaronto. She taught in the Social Service Worker Program at Seneca College for a decade. She has authored multiple editions of HDEV, a tertiary-level textbook, and co-authored a neuroscientific-based paper about trance. Rebecca has a Master’s in interdisciplinary studies focusing on Bungoma healing practices as decolonization praxis. Rebecca, a neurodivergent who has an invisible disability, adores cultivating plants and channels her rage, despair, and healing efforts into creative writing, amateur opera singing, and disrupting systems of oppression in small but ever-growing ways in unceded Sinixt territory in British Columbia.
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Rebecca, this poetry is beautiful! Thank you for posting.
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Beautiful, powerful! Thank you!
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This is beautiful, evocative poetry. Thankyou.
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