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Once I was the living embodiment of the goddess. I dwelt in the Kumari Ghar. Worshipped for my living perfection, I was loved out of necessity. The deep despair that is life drove them to their bellies in my presence, afraid to look on me and compelled to just the same.

Skin, smooth and supple, rippled atop undulating sinew and bone as I performed the rituals with equally flawless and fluid movement. My voice echoed back to me over the supplicants prone and reverential below, dulcet and bewitching.

I was Devi, bestowing my energy on the consciousness of man and allowing him use of me.

That was before. In the bloodless time.

The essence seeps from me now like the drip of water down a cave’s wall, used against me by the same men who once humbly sought me on bended knees.

Flesh hangs and bags over brittle bones while I move without respite, begging for the same attention that was once mine for simply existing. It is I who bows, eyes cast down and hand outstretched in hope of recapturing the essence I once wantonly gave away with no thought of myself.

The greediness of men and the scant length of their memories sears what remains of my soul.

It began on the day of my birth. The midwife assured my parents that my stars were as aligned as my limbs. A perfectly rounded head and eyes the color of a monk’s prayer beads assured that I was kumari. She was sure and they rejoiced in good fortune because, as word spread, villagers transformed the hovel of my nativity into a grotto. Want would not know them again for four years.

When the priests arrived in our miserable village, I was paraded before them with two other girls born in the region on the same day as I. But I already knew I was Devi, and I refused to be handled, subjected to the doubt. And then they knew too.

There are thirty-two points of perfection. I was all and more.

When I sang, men wept with joy and women with the knowledge of their own inadequacies.

It never occurred to me then my goddess self was mortal. How could I have known? From my earliest conscious moments my divinity was praised and nurtured. I was never told my holy essence was housed in what amounted to a decaying prison. Every day bringing me closer to banishment from my earth tethered celestial home.

I was four years old when I walked through the temple doors. My gait steady and unhurried, ignoring the priests who sought to herd me like a common girl while simultaneously shielding me from any potential harm as my people strove to get as close to me as they would ever be allowed.

Only my oldest human sister accompanied me. I could have ordered my priests to move the entire human family to the temple grounds. I think they were expecting me to do that as my human parents did remind me before the priests came to escort me home that I was allowed to bring them if I chose.

But I did not choose.

Simple minded and attached to dreams of what my divinity could do for them, I bade them stay and dedicate themselves to a simpler way of life. It was obvious to me where they belonged although, apparently, it was not clear to them. Their place was not at my side anymore.

Your dutiful care of me has been appreciated, I told them when my priests arrived, but you have had exclusive access, and yes – sadly – use of me for long enough. Our mutual journey together is now over.

My human sister was different.

Amina’s grace and beauty pleased me. Her devotion and love was a credit to her. More importantly she had not once sought to use my god-nature for her own gain.

She would die for me.

And I loved her for that.

I shouldn’t have, but I did. Sometimes eternals succumb to favorites and Amina was mine. Just  ten months older, she could have been my twin.  As the priests schooled me in rituals and protocol, so I in turn taught her. Many was the time she surreptitiously took my place. The priests would shake with impotent fury when it happened, but it was a delicious joke for us.

One we should not have played so often.

The one aspect of ritual in which I never tutored Amina was communion with the Guardians. There was simply nothing to teach or learn. Even I didn’t know exactly how I became one with them and if the priests knew, which was doubtful, they were not forthcoming.

“The guardians of the rainbow don’t like those who get in the way of the sun.”

With these words was I introduced to my brethren and immersed for the first time in the rainbow rays that flooded the inner sanctum of the temple, a place where only the living goddess dwelt. I was the only one who could bear the intensity of communion.

The first experience overwhelmed me. The onslaught to my senses was a lesser version of what I would know with men in the days after the first blood. Much less.

Sometimes if I lift my face to the sun and close my eyes enough to allow the its dimming rays to illuminate the lids pink and orange, and if I still myself to the point where the heart slows and the rush of blood trickles like a parched stream, I can almost remember the heat -the pleasure – throbbing through me. Vibrations that would shake a mere girl apart.

On the day of my birth, my last self had finally ceased her first moon cycle and was called to communion by the priests. A mere girl again, she did not survive. And thus was I born again.

But this time, for reasons I still do not know, I remembered what they had done. And when my moon phase was at its end, I sent Amina, donned her clothing and escaped into the penitent throng.

That was many sun phases ago and since that time no Devi has inhabited the Kumari Ghar though the priests search and search for me as the sun grows dimmer and our world colder.

No one suspects this old whore. Well, almost no one.

The guardians of the rainbow don’t like those who get in the way of the sun**.

*This short story was based on a picture starter provided by Parenthesis and is a recurrent meme on that site. My idea came from an association of the picture with the Globe and Mail story on Nepal’s living goddesses and a bit of research. Not my best work, but not bad either. Comments? Or simply play if you like. The rules are on Parenthesis’s site and are linked above. The deadline is August 31st. This is just a rough draft. I haven’t done much by way of editing or revising but plan to and submit it in a more polished form – somewhere. All rights are reserved to me then so don’t reprint this without my permission.

**This line was part of the challenge and was taken from “Going Postal” by Terri Prachett.


Despite vowing we would get more sleep this weekend, Rob and I were up until 1 AM watching the dvd, Running with Scissors. Did you know it was actually nominated for a Golden Globe? I can’t imagine why. It was a hodge-podge of quirky characters in what amounted to a montage of scenes that almost, but never quite, tells a whole story.

Note to self – the only reason to stay up late is love making. And on a further note, it is really the only truly good reason to get up early as well.

Being a geek, I was driven to google Augusten Burroughs to ascertain whether the novel he wrote was as crappy as the movie made from it. I discovered a blog, a Wikipedia page, and this YouTube video. All of which has convinced me that I need to finally work his novel into my reading rotation. I have a copy. My BFF gave it to me for my birthday two years ago, but I was never moved to read it. My own life was drama enough then. I didn’t care to know about someone else’s true life woe.

You might wonder why I bother to research and report on the author of a memoir that was a predictably shit movie, but I find writers quite interesting. I love to know about what brought them “to the show” so to speak. Where did their book come from? How do they feel about the process and what is that for them?

One of the entries in Burroughs’ blog discusses his response to being asked about fame. In his reply he notes that the death of his best friend and former partner has tempered it in a way I can relate to. It simply is not that big of a deal in the light of everything else. Much of his perception changed and he didn’t care as he once did. Funny how widowed crop up in my life sometimes.

Anyway, tomorrow be sure to drop by to read a short (very short) piece of fiction I wrote in answer to a writing prompt on the blog of one of my husband’s semi-regular readers. It’s not bad but I am going to beef it up and change a few things before trying to find a magazine to send it off to.


Canadians are big on returning their cans, bottles and tetra packs. I am not sure whether it’s a dedication to the environment or the conflicting nature of their relationship with money that drives them*.

If it is liquid here, it’s taxed. Given the the overall distaste for letting the government have any of their money, Canadians return their drinkables – and other people’s too.

Unlike Iowa, where I used to live and returns for deposit were taken back to the grocery, here we have “bottle depots”. These separate businesses collect and refund a fraction of the deposit to the consumer. The return is so small – fueling my cheap theory – that it is hardly worth the effort of rinsing and storing and hauling to the centers, but people do it anyway. Unlike us, however, most people I have seen at the bottle depots wait until they can fill the backs of their trucks and SUV’s before making the trip. I have even seen vans stuffed with stuffed garbage bags**. It’s the only way to make this pay, but I couldn’t stand the pile-up. Of course with us it would take months and months to accumulate a truck load even given that we must go through more rice milk tetra packs than anyone we know given the lactose situation in this household.

Visiting the Bottle Depot in The Fort is always an adventure in waiting. The drop-off is behind the building and accessible only through a narrow drive that semi-circles it and once you drive into the loop – you are stuck for the duration. There is no backing up and out or scooting around vehicles ahead of you. There is simply no room to do that.

The business is operated by immigrants – Chinese, Rob thinks – which is no surprise.  Many of the less desirable jobs and services fall to enterprising people from elsewhere when you are in boom times. The place gives off a sticky, smelly, bug-crusted feel from the goop covered table out front to the stained cloth bins that are visible from the drop off window.

The owners are very stringent about closing time, ordering waiting cars to back up and leave when they perceive they are in danger of missing that deadline. However they are loose on the concept of opening. I guess if I were doing such mind-numbing and dirty work all day, I wouldn’t be in a hurry to open my doors either. Yesterday, as an example, the Bottle Depot didn’t open until about 10 minutes after the posted time despite the line of vehicles out to the street.  But I have lived in Canada long enough now to recognize the lax Canadian mind-set on time when I see it.

Canadians believe time is fluid. Arriving anywhere for any reason on time is a concept that in my experience only Mexicans are more liberal with.

My sense of “when” and my punctuality has not been improved by living here. BabyD, for example, is the girl whose mother never gets her to school on time.

It’s funny how you get used to things. So much in Canada is just a hair off my American experiences that it still gives me a Bizzarro world feel though.

* They will spend money on Holiday trailers and multiple vehicles and acreages – gawd they are insane for faux country living here – but they will cheap-cheap over GST and text messages and at the check-out in the Safeway for what amounts to pennies.

** Soda and alcohol returns mainly. Stuff we only rarely consume.