keening.
by bam

the winds have been howling all night, a rushing, a roaring of air on amphetamines. sometimes the sound rises in pitch, almost a keening, the sound of a soul in mourning.
keening, a word that draws me half around the world to the banshees of that faraway island from which my people came (a good half of my people, actually, but it seems the half i’m rooted in). it’s a word that places me in a dark and damp room where a fire roars, and the people are circled in sorrow, cloaked in black woolen wraps. swaying and rocking, the sound that rises up is the sound that lives at the pit of us, the sound that rises when our heart or our soul is shattered. cracked wide open. it’s the ooze of anguish that comes without volition. keening sometimes comes without knowing. it just is. it’s primal. a reservoir so deep inside us it takes velocities of sorrow to tap into it, to draw from its well.
i might have keened once or twice, but i barely remember. both times someone had died, and it felt like part of me did as well. i remember the sound, remember i barely knew where it rose from, or that i’d had it inside.
the God who imagined us imagined so far beyond the imaginable. the God who imagined us gave us a sound, buried it deep, deep inside, where it awaits necessity. there are in our lives times when only that keening will do. that high pitched guttural whoosh that captures the unspeakable, a whoosh that rises and falls, traces the scale from basso, the animal roar, to mezzo soprano, up high where it’s piercing.
and why would the wind be keening?
look around.
listen.
don’t let us dull to the litany.
waking up to find we live in a pariah nation is one. but that’s almost too big for my head. i tend to operate in the finer grain. and the closest i came to keening this week was the news that the poet had been shot through the head.
what poet, you might ask?
the one in minnesota. the one whose first description i read was “37-year-old, mother of a six-year-old, award-winning poet.”
who shoots a poet? how often does the descriptor of a violent death include the word poet?
poets are porous. poets live in the world permeable to the little-noticed. poets process what’s breathtaking and put it, miraculously, to words. poets, the ones i love, the ones whose words put form and frame to unutterable parts of me, they’re among the most gentle-souled humans i’ve known.
renée good was a poet. a mother. and she died at 37, in the front seat of her maroon van we’ve all now watched over and over.
renée good, back when she went by the name renée nicole macklin, won the 2020 academy of american poets prize. that’s not a prize for a piker. that’s a real-deal prize, a trophy worth tucking on the highest shelf in your house. she won it for a poem curiously titled “On Learning to Dissect Fetal Pigs.” now, that might not be the first thing that stirs me to want to write a poem. but poets begin in curious places sometimes and take us into terrain where wisdom or epiphany comes.
when we become a nation where a poet is shot through the windshield, just minutes after dropping her six-year-old off at school, we need to ask who in the world we’ve become. it only becomes more twisted when we can see for ourselves how the scene unfolded, and the people in charge, the ones holding the guns, the ones not letting a doctor rush to the scene, tell us that we didn’t see what we saw.
i wonder how apt this headline would be: good is dead.
that would be the headline atop the poet’s obituary. rachel good, award-winning poet and mother of three, was shot through the head. by federal agents. who then refused to let a doctor rush to the front seat of her bloodied, bloodied minivan. and waited too many fading heartbeats before giving the okay to call 9-1-1.
no wonder the wind is keening.
no wonder the world is tapping into its most guttural cries.
not long before i’d found myself tripping over the violent death of rachel good, i’d been thinking deeply about poets. thinking about a breed of poets i’d likened to “a tribe of saintesses.” that’s a feminization of saint, an intentional genderizing, if you will, because the poets i’m most drawn to might technically, and in an old-time world, be coined poetesses, and because the ones to which i am most deeply drawn are ones who weave the sacred, even the liturgical, into the vernacular from which they write. because the saintesses to whom i am most drawn are the ones whose verse scans the divine, shimmers at the edge of the ineffable, catches me unaware, but grounds me in a certainty more certain than many a gospel, i turn to them for edification and plain old uplift of my weary soul.
i keep them in close reach.
sitting just beside me here at this old maple table are two such poet saints, the ones whose lines leave me gasping, my spine tingling as if something holy has just wafted by and through me. because it has.
here’s one. her name is kathleen hirsch, and this is from her mending prayer rugs (finishing line press, 2025). it’s the last stanza of her poem “prayer rugs” (emphasis mine):
I bend in blessing toward all that breathes
May each hour enlarge the pattern—
rose dawn, wind song, tender shoots of faith—
that I may see the weft of the hidden weaver.
or, also sitting right by my elbow, jan richardson’s how the stars get in your bones: a book of blessings (wanton gospeller press, 2025), i flip through pages and pluck just one, titled “the midwife’s prayer.” it begins:
Keep screaming, little baby girl.
Keep practicing using those lungs
and do not stop,
because hollering will help
to ease the shock
every time you go through
another birth.
the saintesses, i swear, speak from a godly vernacular. they see deeper than the rest of us, dwell deeper too. their gift is the gift taken away at Babel. while all the rest of us were stripped of the powers of universal understanding, the saintesses kept on. they speak words that speak to all of us—if we listen closely. if we trace our fingers across the lines they offer, sacramental lines, lines that lift off the page, lift us off the page and into the transcendent, where for just a moment we get to reside.
i don’t know the rest of rachel good’s poems. but i know she was a poet. and the silence where once she spun the words of the unspoken, the little-heard voice, that silence now is cacophonous.
and even the winds are keening.
you can read the whole of rachel good’s prize-winning fetal-pig poem here.
and here are the first few lines…
On Learning to Dissect Fetal Pigs
by Renée Nicole Macklin
i want back my rocking chairs,
solipsist sunsets,
& coastal jungle sounds that are tercets from cicadas and pentameter from the hairy legs of cockroaches.
i’ve donated bibles to thrift stores
(mashed them in plastic trash bags with an acidic himalayan salt lamp—
the post-baptism bibles, the ones plucked from street corners from the meaty hands of zealots, the dumbed-down, easy-to-read, parasitic kind):
what shall we do to quell the need for keening? and what poets draw you into the depths of the Holy?




The night my mentor died, the Chicago winds were keening, raging, howling. And I, keening, stood in the driveway of my childhood home and howled loudly, plaintively. I then listened to Mozart’s Clarinet Concerto in A Major, Adagio movement.
Concerning “so far beyond the imaginable” the Kabbalah teaches “Before anything emanated, there was only Ein Sof. Ein Sof was all that existed. Similarly, after it brought into being that which exists, there is nothing but it. You cannot find anything that exists apart from it. There is nothing that is not pervaded by the power of divinity. If there were, Ein Sof would be limited, subject to duality, God forbid! Rather, God is everything that exists, though everything that exists is not God. It is present in everything, and everything comes into being from it. Nothing is devoid of its divinity. Everything is within it; it is within everything and outside of everything. There is nothing but it.”
Good is dead. Long live good.
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beautiful. Ein Sof is a powerful powerful belief…..so much in the Kabbalah i find beautiful……
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Thank you.
Bless you.
I am heartbroken. Thank you for writing this and sharing her poetry.
it is unbearable the more deeply you think of it. this morning i pictured that little 6-year-old crying for his mama…..and for what? for what was a child’s life shattered? >
I can’t get that out of my head, either. The stuffed animals in her car. It’s just so tragic and unnecessary and cruel.
Good is dead….. I pray it not be so. My entire body and soul is sick. Heart sick, head sick, soul sick. Wake please, wake. Thank you for this beautiful tribute to one of ours in everysense. I am keening…. Thank you bam
dear darling, i swear i replied to this the other day, but i see my reply is not here. gremlins.
i cannot imagine how deep the shock waves tearing across your fair city, which has found itself weeping and weeping and keening and keening over and over and over again.
padraig o team this morning in his poetry unbound newsletter looks at renee’s fetal pig poem……worth a look, indeed. (i pulled a quote from it below…)
I can’t even anymore…thank you for being able to put such sorrow into words. Such a gift.
i was worried about you sweetheart. i know how hard all this is on your blessed heart. i love that blessed heart. and i ache for its aching. xoxoxo
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Cinna the Poet in Shakespeare’s Julius Caesar, set upon by a murderous mob, comes to mind — and makes about as much sense (NONE).
Love you, my tender hearted, truth-telling friend. And yes, I’m keening too.
Cheryl
what i love most about this ol’ table is the hive of brilliant minds who hover here. i never know what thoughts will be brought here, or where those brilliant minds will travel. that shakespearean tragedy comes to mind in the sphere of minneapolis is most apt. and i’d not had the thought.
as long as we keep making noise, keening or otherwise. we cannot go silent.
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it’s me again, because i just read padraig o tuama’s poetry unbound musings for the week, and found he too pondered how poetry can meet the moment when the moment cannot be contained in words.
he writes:
“It is a sombre time to think of poems of life and death. And poetry is capable of carrying us with sombre language. Poetry does not make promises, and it does not seek to solve. Poetry is a place where sharp turns of language can exist alongside metaphors of sweet love. Poetry changes time and time changes poetry: we read both of these poems differently now that we know both poets have died; though the death of one was merciful, and the other was merciless. We see that clearly too.”
(I am only a poet in the sense of rigid coarseness, but I write Good poetry for the sake of her children, her loved ones. Keening sobs of why, without wonder…only bedrock.) it struck me so deeply, that she wasn’t even offered a blindfold
Blindfold
Bullets spray like ice Cold, razor sharp missiles of insanity Piercing the very backbone of America… Good is gone Our eyes open to it all Condemned to see Without the offer of a blindfold an undertaker, aflame With desire To collect the living In a mass grave Bury the country Deep The Constitution no less lines the plot and as the light dims, as the dirt piles We The People deprived of a covering for our eyes Cannot look away Nor can we grow deaf As the mad executioners song rat-a-tat-tat!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Pardons evil.
holy God, that’s beautiful. and True, living up your name. that should be published, dispatched into the world. thank you for debuting it here. where i read and re-read over and over till its pressed into the whole grain of my soul.
God love you and bless you, True Wonder…..
i know i do….