Tag Archives: healing

Banks

she goes to the river

most mornings to watch and listen

to pray

she likes the soft ripple of waves

their song barely audible above

whispering leaves and rhythmic steps

of wanderers on the nearby gravel path

she brings bouquets from her garden

tied with wispy ribbons

or string bits she finds in the street

trees are gods she thinks

deserving of these quiet gifts

they take in talk and laughter

hear confessions

absorb human moanings and sighings

rearrange and purify

transform and lighten them

absolve

she knows

she brought her own

stowed them deep in a hollow

she owes her freedom to a tree

to the river flowing past

winding its way into the bay and out to sea

she goes to pay homage

drops her petals of gratitude

encircling the tree with blossoms

she is a pilgrim

she goes to the river most mornings

her river her tree her temple

and though she cannot yet swim

is still afraid of climbing

she will and she can~

A Hand for You

I could have left a note

but it’s windy over there near the bay

You’ll be back before the melting

they remind us every day anyway

I listen to Neve and The Deer Children

sing songs in a language I do not understand

Which path did you choose at the crossroad

I wonder over morning coffee

Where is her other hand you’ll probably ask

when you arrive and find my sign

Why are there no footprints

either coming or going

Trails

With each step you draw ever near
Wind whispers come on lean into your edges
Filtered light leads you along this one way path
Hum your melancholy melody in a minor key

You are not lost just drifting through
This place is everywhere and nowhere
Cross that emerald pond to another side
Your horse with wings waits there for you to ride

Embrasser

I dreamed
a cavernous theatre
where people bid
on others’ colourless goods.
Neither selling
nor buying,
I gripped a framed photo
of someone else’s child.

Then rang
a dinner bell
or a warning.
We carried our
own chairs
shuffle forming
a crowded single line
near the double handled wooden door.

And someone
from far away,
a voice I thought I knew,
shouted stood unbalanced unsteady
waving two open hands:
“before leaving, each one of you
must take and hold me close—-
I am Old Soft Familiar
your fellow (wo)Man”.