becoming nothing, still becoming
Juke Jose
Civic-Sacred: Life, Death, and Liminality
To be light
feels like being in relation.
And to be nothing,
I’m learning it might just mean returning,
quietly, in ways we don’t always notice.
Water moves through the room
the way memory does
in shifts.
Air, then mist, a small puddle on the floor,
and then it becomes something else again.
Whatever shape it takes,
it still carries a part of where it’s been.
I placed these vessels around the house
without a real plan.
Maybe I was hoping time might gather in them,
the way it gathers in things we keep.
Sometimes it lingers.
Sometimes it slips away
before I even realize.
Glissant says totality is the obstacle.
I try to understand that.
So I let things remain unfinished,
soft around the edges,
letting the mist blur what I thought was fixed.
Opacity feels like a kind of kindness
the right not to be fully seen,
or to step back
when being seen feels too heavy.
Dōgen writes that every being
is its own time.
When the mist rises,
I wonder what time it belongs to,
and why it never quite matches mine.
Maybe that mismatch
is part of its honesty.
He also says life and death
aren’t two different paths
just two sides of the same breath.
I think of that
as the vapor lifts into the air
and becomes something
I can’t hold.
Vuong writes that the body
is like a doorway.
Some days I feel that
open, closed,
then open again
and the mist moves through
before I can decide
what I am in that moment.
A small puddle forms on the floor.
It doesn’t reflect much.
But it feels true
like something returning
in the way it only knows how.
When the water leaves,
it doesn’t exactly leave.
It becomes the room,
the air I breathe,
the next condensation.
If I’m honest,
I feel I’m a vessel with cracks.
Things leak through me
grief, memory, love.
Maybe that’s what makes room
for what’s next.
Rumi calls it the zero circle,
the moment you disappear
into what already holds you.
I don’t know if I’m there,
but the mist seems closer
to understanding it better than I am.
Living opaquely
feels like living lightly
leaving a trace
instead of a mark.
Everything here is still becoming.
Nothing stays long enough
to keep a name.
And yet the room
keeps filling
with a presence
I can’t quite explain.
Maybe evaporating
is another way of saying
I’m still here.
Just somewhere else.