Myra Tejada Rasmussen
Awana Kancha
small llama farm near Pisac, Peru
Crouched by looms made of llama bones,
women weave in synchrony, bodies swaying
to pan flute harmonies, around them bright yarn
twirling on drop spindles. My body is hypnotized by rhythm.
Recipes pass mother to daughter:
crush cochinilla bugs for red dye, add lemon
to blood for burnt orange, chisel from indigo rock
the marine blue buried in the deepest corner of sky.
Find bliss in the burgundies. Let smells of chocolate
and greens seep from nogal leaves,
rustle quietly through huarango trees.
And always, always set fire to the elements—
a fire that requires attention, an innate tenderness,
like the tenderness a mother gives her child,
a gift of sancha suncha violets wrapped in her words,
El tiempo todo lo cura. Mother, I think of you now
as an Incan woman offers me a scarf of the finest alpaca
sprinkled with bits of gold, as the crisp Andean air presses
against my face, while the black night uncurls its hands
over the mountain pass and releases me.
Other work by Myra Tejada Rasmussen