September,
2007
Kim Goldberg
ISBN 978-0-9783879-1-4
5 by 8 Trade Paperback
Full colour cover
128 pages $18.95
Ride Backwards on Dragon is
on the short list for the Gerald Lampert Award
Read
a review
We are grateful for the assistance of
Eric Lee at liuhebafa.net
New
Read a review by Friedhelm
Tippner (in German)
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Ride
Backwards on Dragon
a poet's journey through Liuhebafa
by
Kim Goldberg
Shortlisted for the 2008 Lampert Award.
Judges Richard Stevenson, Sheri-D Wilson and Lynda Monahan commented:
"Really love the concept of this book - and
the execution of the leaping imagery! ... wildly inventive, with
thoroughly integrated poetic and content. ... Nice use of demotic
prose, slang, the looser shambling narrative line reminiscent of
Purdy. ... often achieves a more highly wrought melodic line too.
... A lush book full of alchemy and rich in symbolism. ..."
League of Canadian Poets website here.
When award-winning political journalist
and nonfiction author Kim Goldberg began studying the ancient Taoist
internal art of Liuhebafa in 1998, it had an unexpected effect on
her writer's voice: she fell silent for nearly a decade. When the
words finally returned, they came as poems. Ride Backwards On Dragon
is her mapping of that journey through the alien and tumultuous landscape
of inner alchemy and outer upheaval, leading her ultimately to a discovery
of wholeness. In her long-awaited fifth book, Goldberg uses the 66-move
sequence of this little known martial art to frame several levels
of narrative. There is a relationship gone awry, a quest for immortality,
an ancient pre-coital struggle between green dragon and white tiger,
and finally an emergence of voice.
More than a collection of
poems, Ride Backwards On Dragon is closer to a multi-layered poetic
novel in 66 short chapters that interweave ancient and modern, Eastern
and Western, mystic and mundane. In a series of endnotes, Goldberg
decodes the Taoist metaphysical symbolism of the 66 ancient titles
of the movements, revealing them to be a blueprint for living a life.
No other such resource decoding these names has been published in
English. Ride Backwards On Dragon will appeal to anyone who loves
a tale well told. The endnotes make this book a valuable resource
for practitioners of Taoist internal arts (Chi Gong, Tai Chi, Bagua,
Hsing-I, Liuhebafa), or for the person simply seeking a self-authored
life.
We are grateful to Eric Lee for help with the Chinese
characters. His work can be found here.
Click here for:
sample poems
sample endnotes
about the author
reviews
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order simply send
us an email. We will enclose an invoice for $18.95
times the number of copies. We will pay shipping and tax.
1. Stop cart and ask directions
Curtain rises -- thousands of eyes
peck out hard-bitten
steel rivets. Driven. Drilling. Buckling.
Flexing. Holding it all
together.
I want to be more
than a gaffer
in my own life. More than a
focus puller, cable slinger, scenery
changer. I want
a speaking part. Acting
with purpose. Acting with method. Drawing it all
to the surface like a February
herring ball -- ichthyoid desperados
coating ebony seas with false promises
of permanence falling from stinky
fingers. Calling it all
into question. Take the test. Memorize
answers. Fantasize freely associating
with known criminals. Don't
give them what they want. They
know not
how to weep. Keep some for winter, or
never -- You can't be too certain these
days. Stay with me
under wet thunder splitting our
guts
behind waterfalls of
stolen hearts. We'll
scream our swollen dreams. We'll
rip it up, tear it off the wall. Take me
to the well, line it with stones,
stone me
with lines, unwind me like a fly-caster slicing
ambiguous space into sovereign nations. Don't
cast me in the lead.
Just give me a speaking part.
© Kim Goldberg, 2007
48. Watch flowers on running horses
The summer I was seventeen, my boyfriend
(the first one I really loved) snuck me
into the drive-in in the trunk
of his 1960 Desoto that I helped him paint
the week before (abalone blue like
his eyes). And looking back, I'm not sure
why I'm the one who had to
go in the trunk, or why I said "yes," or why
he couldn't just pay the extra
buck seventy-five. But I only weighed
a hundred and ten pounds, and trunks
were really spacious in those days (even with
four dead batteries stuffed alongside me). Besides,
he was just back from Vietnam and I was
glad to see him still in one piece. Eighteen
years later he lost his right hand in a
sawmill blade. But at the drive-in, he was all there
and all mine (once I got out of the trunk, that is).
The flick was Easy Rider, but don't ask me
for a recap since we were having sex
in the back seat till the credits, which didn't
feel as good as I thought it would (the sex,
I mean) 'cause there was a socket set or a
beer bottle or something grinding into my hip bone
the whole time. And some gear lube I must have
picked up in the trunk was smeared on my bangs,
which kept slapping my eyes like wet spaghetti.
Next week, when we were at a keg party
up the river, it started to rain and my bell-bottom
jeans that I'd spent about a hundred hours
sewing patches and leather-strapped beads onto
for the last half-year began to disintegrate
until they fell right off my legs, which everyone
thought was a gas (except me). And when
my boyfriend stopped laughing, he said it was the
battery acid from the trunk of the Desoto. But he
found me some coveralls, and we smoked
a big fattie. Love is like that.
© Kim Goldberg, 2007
1. Stop cart and ask directions
In Taoist metaphysics, the cart is
the water-cart or waterwheel turning the waters of life within us.
In stopping it to ask directions, we are taking stock of our lives,
assessing the flow of our energies. This can refer to the direction
of flow of the "microcosmic orbit" within us - are we able
to drive our generative energy up the spine and down the front of
our bodies for the reversal of aging? Or are we letting it flow in
the opposite direction (the direction the waters of the world will
set in motion) and out of our bodies, not yet knowing how to contain
it? If that seems too abstract, we can use this move as a simple barometer
of our energies - are they coherent or diffuse? Bright or dim? Building
or waning? Coalescing or leaking away through the orifices of desire
(eyes, ears, nose, mouth, genitals, anus)? This first move summons
us to take a reading of our inner selves. And as such, it embodies
the underlying philosophy of Liuhebafa (and indeed, of Taoism as well).
The message is: We are responsible for our lives; we have the power
to choose. The choice we are asked to make in the first move is between
two paths - life and health, or death and decay. If we are ready to
choose the first path, then we continue with the form.
©Kim Goldberg, 2007
25. Support sky and cover earth
Sky (heaven) and earth are yet another yin/yang
pairing common to Taoist alchemy. Sky is yang (the masculine), and
earth yin (the feminine). The sky/earth binary also signifies the
original mind paired with the original body, as well as head (the
"upper tantien") paired with belly (the "lower tantien").
A tantien is an energy field. There are three in the body - upper,
middle, and lower - corresponding to spirit energy ("shen"),
vital energy "(chi"), and generative energy ("jing"),
respectively. In Taoist cosmology, the original division of the
undifferentiated nothingness (or "wu-chi") that brought
forth the world through a subsequent chain reaction of further divisions
was the division of heaven from earth (yang from yin). The goal
of Taoist internal practice is to return the microcosmic universe
(the body/self) to the original undifferentiated state, hence all
the metaphoric references to the copulation of yin and yang. At
a physiological level, the work of energy circulation and re-unification
is achieved, in part, through improved posture in which the spinal
column is straightened and expanded, creating a better conduit for
energy flow. So no kinking of neck vertebrae, no hunching of thoracic
vertebrae, no swayback curve to lower lumbar vertebrae. When we
stack our vertebrae one atop the next to create a straight and open
pathway to the head, we are "supporting sky." Similarly,
when we flatten out the lower lumbar arch by dropping the tailbone,
the pelvis starts to wrap around more of the belly, thus "covering
earth" and providing better support to our internal organs.
©Kim Goldberg, 2007
Return to top
Excerpt from Cahoots Magazine
Review
... And what poems! Goldberg's often unusual use of line breaks
and careful choice of words display a thoughtful and precise use
of language intent on impacting the reader, pulling them from
their constant state of mind into the image and the teachings.
Goldberg's poems burn with the dragon's fire, soothe with the
lotus leaves, liberate by the flying geese. ... A valuable resource
and a delicious read, Ride Backwards on Dragon takes
the reader not only on the poet's journey, but leads them on their
own journey of self-discovery and contemplation.
Cahoots
Magazine
Link
to Das Liu He Ba Fa Blog and a review by Friedhelm Tippner
(in German)
Excerpt from Synergy Magazine
Review
The journey is exotic, and the scenery is great. In some of the
more intense poems, images crowd nose to tail to nose across the
page: a word-cornucopia treat for the poetry lover or visual thinker.
Churning seas, birds and bees, a gun carrying cow-girl, and a
released prisoner can all be seen along the way, sharing the poet
road: Metaphor. And flitting, flirting, around, throughout them
all, are the mythological tigers and dragons that inspire much
of liuhebafa, engaged in a high stakes game of tag. (Lia Light)
Read
the whole review here
Synergy
Magazine
|
Kim Goldberg's poetry
has appeared in PRISM International, The Dalhousie Review, Nimrod
International Journal, The New Quarterly, On Spec, Cahoots, and
other literary magazines in North America and England. She is the
author of Where to See Wildlife on Vancouver Island, Submarine
Dead Ahead!, The Barefoot Channel, and other nonfiction books.
She has had more than 2,000 articles on politics, media, and current
events published in Macleans, Canadian Geographic, Nature Canada,
The Progressive, New Internationalist, Vancouver Sun, BBC Wildlife,
and numerous other magazines and newspapers for more than twenty years.
Born and raised in Oregon, with a degree in Biology from University
of Oregon, she now lives on Vancouver Island where she grows ridiculous
amounts of basil and continues to practice Liuhebafa daily.
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