
Coleman did so much during his amazing life… Thank you dear friend!
Here is something he wrote about death years ago…
In between Deaths
Coleman Barks Poetry Daily, 1/19/2009
I do not want the last thing I say to anyone
to be how I feel something has gone cold in me
and I don’t love you as much as I used to.
You always want the truth, don’t you?
Well that’s how it is with me at the moment.
I don’t want that to be the last thing someone
like you hears from me, and the way to make
sure that does not happen is to not indulge
any moments of mean, prideful self-critique,
these failures of the heart to keep time in
the dance we are set down in the middle of
every day. Do not say it. Refrain, because
just one small step-minute more and it will not
remain true. It never stays long in that cold place,
the heart, or if it has in your experience, don’t dwell
on those examples. My father’s last words to me
were Drive carefully. I can’t afford to lose
anyone else. Mother had died some weeks earlier….
…My part in the Rumi phenomenon is slowing.
I still love repainting the high desert caravanserai
retreat cells of his poems, though sometimes
I would rather be writing this wandering, which
I claim has its own variety of kindness and
sudden-looking-in. It is a way my dad did not
have much interest in, or talent for. But I do
claim too to be open to listening to other people’s
difficulties, dilemmas, delusions, and delights,
though I don’t go out hunting them as he did.
I more enjoy scooting about like a zigzag
waterbug above the motionless Chinese goldfish
hung in the living jade of a shadow from where
one of them may, one will, suddenly twitch
and gobble me out of this talking any second.
Coleman and Zuleikha She danced to his Rumi poems. They were great together!!


Coleman inspired me with his wonderful words. Here’s his comment on my first book:
“Wives” is a riveting hen-house of delight, a book based on subjects our society finds endlessly confusing — marriage, matriarchy, and Muhammad. Finally, we get to meet the first women of Islam.
Tamam, thank you for doing this brave book. —Coleman

Ya Hayyoo and Ya Shakur for sharing these words as we remember Coleman Barks and the great inheritance he has given us. Love Light HUGS and Gratitude, Beloved,
from ZubinNur 🫲❤️🫱
LikeLiked by 1 person
Ya Hayyoo and Ya Shakur for sharing these words as we remember Coleman Barks and the great inheritance he has given us. Love Light HUGS and Gratitude, Beloved,
from ZubinNur 🫲❤️🫱
LikeLiked by 1 person