Rainy night in Lake County in heading in to Harbin
Rainy night in Lake County 
in heading in to Harbin ... 
Blue moonlight on wet road 
illuminating the behind, 
through my rear view mirror. 
I stop for beauty. 
Mozart sounds ... what  
musical conceptions! 
And from long ago, 
yet here so now, - 
away we go 
all over that space 
of virtuosity ... 
I slow in, in wonder,  
to Harbin, 
soon to soak. 
Traveling here, 
another poem coming, 
expression finds 
flower form 
like water traveling
up from ground, 
seeking pool to warm 
seeping into 
all those 
inner bodymind recesses,  
that welcome ease ...  
and flourish in. 
There's freedom & agency 
in writing poems ...  
to write what one likes, 
and to sing the song 
one wants to, - 
to fly in the warmth 
of word music, 
intimate, lyrical &  free - 
and inhabit all those 
rosy spheres, 
or what you will, 
which differs from 
the freedoms 
of being a Doctor, 
or an Anthropologist, 
with their languages. 
Exploring other 
languages & spheres 
is possible 
wth these knowledges, 
but these freedoms 
aren't inherent in 
knowledges' discourses. 
Writing Poetry offers 
autonomy - 
but by which, especially! -
when you find 
(one of your) your muse 
of poetry ... 
you soar. 
Snow in the morning, 
beautiful snow 
on the evergreens 
above the creek 
over the bridge 
to the conference center, 
I see out the door of my car,
in quiet, wintery Harbin ... 
bodymind music with Harbin. :) 
I see in this snow, 
falling in nature,  
a beautiful philosophy of
Lao Tzu and Gia-Fu Feng's 'Tao te Ching,' 
with Jane English's photos ... 
Up to the pools 
'cause it's cold out 
and the day is alive.
 
... But first a little warmth 
under my 2 sleeping bags 
in the car. 
Winter camping is amazing 
because you are right there 
and so alive 
in the cold beauty 
of the snow. 
... A tree branch breaks 
from the wieght of snow
off to the side. 
Snow is richly falling 
and warm pool awaits.
The snow falls & accumulates - 
seven inches - 
the power goes out, 
and people smile differently, 
at Harbin.
The world is changed. 
The ground is white, 
and the red lawn chair, 
with the light green ones 
that match the color 
of Walnut and Azalea
guest buildings 
are a surreal trip, 
a French painting 
of white otherness, 
of a transformed 
afterimage, light world. 
Where did this come from 
and who anticipated this 
beautiful otherness - 
for seeing?
Some folks are soaking 
in the heart pool. 
She, coming in naked to him - 
they have a good relationship - 
is pretty. 
Her breasts are nice too. 
They linger together a lot 
in the waters, both smiling 
in their intimacy. 
The warm pool is closed, 
because the still-falling  
snow is heavy 
and tree branches 
are cracking all around. 
A branch might fall 
on someone in the pool. 
One man is standing 
on another underwater 
in the heart pool, body-surfing, 
and stands a second too long, 
and he, underneath, 
comes up coughing. 
They do more Watsu. 
One woman - we're all naked 
in the heart pool - makes three 
mini-snow people 
at pool's edge. 
She is the snow queen 
and they are her subjects, 
and they are m e l t i n g. 
The snow is falling so heavily 
that some of us have 
snow crowns on our heads. 
Another woman in the pool 
is high energy - 
hippie, 'out there' - 
different from the calm 
of many of us 
in this pool, 
on this crazy-weather day. 
She wants to engage ... 
hippy neurophysiology 
can be free, sexual 
and in your face, 
and Harbin's doors are open
to hippies.
Later in the day, 
this white woman 
comes into the warm pool 
with her black friend, 
does some dolphin flips, 
talking much of the time 
in the waters 
then cuddles with her 
African American friend. 
Nothing seems to settle her. 
This snow is wild, unusual, 
and there's so much of it! 
A dance! Someone 
in the heart pool 
says there's a dance 
at one in the Temple. 
How unusual - 
the power's out - 
sounds fun. It's a  
Harbin thing, - a dance 
in the middle of the day. 
Good energy: 
someone has a 
small boombox 
on batteries. 
There are two congas and 
some percussion instruments 
in the middle 
of this beautiful round room, 
but no one is playing them. 
There's quiet, meditative 
music playing - not quite 
exuberant, dance music - 
and he asks me if I have 
any other music. 
People are dancing - 
fifteen folks perhaps. 
I ask everyone whether 
they have any other music, 
and someone sits down 
at a conga in the center, 
then another drummer ...  
Man, they can play. 
More people join in, 
and the dancing grows, 
with folks improvising, 
and grooving - 
pretty wild, - 
and all because of the snow.
Someone opens the 
harmonium and another 
pulls out an upright base - 
and everybody is 
playing and making music, 
and weaving in different 
lines of music. 
I start to sing 
in the tenor range, 
in a high falsetto voice - 
while sitting on the cushions 
under the temple windows - 
harmoniously, while the 
music is peaking, crescendoing - 
MMmmm ... Musical energy 
exchange, and synergies. 
Thank you, Harbin :)
It's three, and there's a 
Breema bodywork 
workshop next 
in the Temple. 
I want to head home 
back to Canyon, 
where I live, 
before the road freezes, 
so I take off. 
I soon find out 
that the Harbin road 
is closed - with seven inches 
of snow, trees across it, and 
a power line down on it.
Up to the pools instead. 
Electricity generators 
come out. 
There's one just inside 
the pool area to illuminate 
the warm and hot pools, 
and dressing room. 
And there's another 
at the top of the 
restaurant stairs 
to power the kitchen.
The restaurant and 
Stonefront's living room
have fireplaces with 
natural gas, and 
are toasty warm. 
Harbin in 
such a power outage,  
years ago, would have been 
a lot colder and darker. 
What energy works at Harbin,
when the electricity goes out? 
Geothermally warmed 
waters still flow out of the ground, - 
so the pools stay nice. 
The mechanical timers to turn on 
heaters in the dressing room 
still work, although there's no heat - 
that's physics. 
And there's natural gas, or propane, 
fueling the three power generators 
that I've seen - the third one to illuminate 
the lower parking  lot. 
When electricity fails at Harbin, 
the geology and physics 
of other energy sources still work, - 
Far out.
When Harbin returns to the natural 
because the electricity fails - 
thank you Thomas Edison for electricity - 
Harbin's waters still flow, 
but get a little browner from the stormy weather. 
And Harbin gets a little wilder and darker at night, - 
with its wondrous, evening illumination out.
Harbin is already pretty close to the natural, 
especially relative to city life. 
There's a lot of untouched land 
in its valley. 
It's simple & rustic 
as a hot springs' retreat center, 
and, emerging from the 1960s, 
'the natural' (and, to some degree, the organic) 
are integral to its vision. 
Yet lack of electricity as a definer 
of Harbin's naturalness - 
because, in this snowstorm, 
Harbin reverted to nontechnological processes 
of detritus falling into the pools, 
of diurnal rhytms, and snow falling - 
I see how far Harbin is 
from the ecology of wilderness, 
as another definer of the natural, by contast. 
I appreciate Harbin's degrees of naturalness 
and technological choices in 2011, 
- thanks to this snowstorm and electricity outage. 
To transform writing about (inspiring) Harbin 
(in contrast. for me, to modernity) 
not only into poetry, 
but also into Mozartian-cum-J.S. Bach-cum-Grateful Dead music, 
so that the writing itself is 
blissful, erotic even, social and joyous 
and produces beautiful, improvisational music, 
is a process I'm curious about. 
Up to the pools ...  
It's fun to write poem-field notes 
in my sleeping bags, 
in the back of my car, 
on a rainy morning at Harbin. 
Thank you, Heartsong. :)
(First lines about through 'Tao te Ching' written on February 16 & 17,  2011, and posted here in blog on February 17).
(http://scott-macleod.blogspot.com/2011/03/azelea-rainy-night-in-lake-county-in.html - Edited and significantly extended on March 2, 2011)
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