Catholic Naturalist’s Lonesome Rebellion
by Kampie
June 21, 2026 | Poetry | Here I am God!, Yeah I see you, we all do…
Standing tall within a field of
grass in midmorning in May in too many years
with the plague of my head.
I think…30 feet from the road
I parked, I walked, I began stripping
In shirt sleeves now, dropped my trousers
and they hung at ease away from the waist.
Semi-naked and God is everywhere, in everything.
Holds me to every standard but my own
but there is a hope he does not see my skin
among the foliage of unnamed backroad #200.
Yet these hands still hesitate against the cotton
that guards my innate obscenities.
Each fiber unique in feel and pull
(unnecessary) Jockey holding all
of me in one, its inverse torso pyramid.
Woven capital cleanliness.
in clothing only my own
my haunches awake to the wind
head frees itself…forearms empty
stretched across the rear pulling myself open.
Happy. Not improper, so as to forget the heretical nature of
the action replaced with the elation of freedom.
What else now, I screamed out loud
as much as possible for any angels,
massaged myself hot and thought
nothings but to grab and touch the parts of me
I could not touch alone.
In hindsight, it must have taught
me how to be alone, love as only the self.
Between the oaks, asphalt, beneath the powerlines,
it was all life around me, and that breeze,
soothingly attacked my fragile body,
stiffened legs tainted in fresh air.
A miracle occurred there. I masturbated
and came quick and God was there to watch,
He delivered quickly.
A big damned snarling convoy
of eighteen-wheelers chased by three cop cars,
a funeral procession, and the Chicago Bears football
team rattled by in all their cars and trucks and buses.
So, I fell onto myself, half squatting in the wet.
I am only human and He can see me well, everywhere.
Kampie is a poet and writer living in Emporia, Kansas.