Because my anticipation for spring and trees and grass under my feet is overwhelming, I'm sharing this piece from last year. It makes summer feel closer.
Fall has returned from its long hiatus, slipping silently into summer
like a diver into water, without a splash. We greet each other as I sit
under the tree where I sat a year ago. I see the ghost of myself a few
feet off, head bent in concentration, her posture vibrating with
nervousness and excitement, unsure of herself at the precipice of
something new, yet ready to conquer. I salute her and pull my book from
my bag, already stamping this place again with my memory. As the sun
swims downward, I read my latest Barbara Kingsolver- a book of essays,
the lyrical words and crisp fall breeze knitting a cocoon around my
body. I read of hopes and fears and finding solace in the wild things.
"Among the greatest of all gifts is to know our place." Yes. Me too.
Always. Barbara Kingsolver has it- the magic of blending quiet words
with a powerful voice. She pulls the detritus away and reveals shining
nuggets of truth in mere sentences. It is a haunting power, and I
eagerly sift through the debris with her. "People need wild places...We need to be able to taste grace and know once again that we desire it."
I
look at the time and then at the woods nearby. There's time enough.
Quietly I stuff the book away, hitch up my bag, and follow the steep
trail into a grove of trees that quickly muffles the sights and sounds
of students. I take my time, wending down the path, stopping to watch a
chipmunk- their voices sound like the chirp of birds, how did I never
know that- and come to a little bridge, shielded from the bike path
nearby, utterly alone and yet surrounded by life.
Slowly,
I feel my mind stop its whirling dance, like a bird alighting on a
fencepost. Letting go of the to-do lists written on the chalkboard
inside my head, the endless litany of things to be done and things to
worry over, I sink down and lay on the bridge. Pulling my body into
various stretches, I breathe in and out, centering myself here, with the
trees and the birds and the chipmunks. Now. Now is good. Feeling small
is good. I lay down on the bridge, my gaze stretching up and I feel such
a surge of love for the plants and animals. A connection thrums through
my body like a plucked guitar string, bringing sudden tears to my eyes.
I am part of this, I am of this, we are all of the same God. The trees
above me seem so strong and enduring, but they are slowly being poisoned
as I lay here, the whole earth bleeding out with each second that
passes. The trees are the tangible past, our history, hundreds of years
of days and nights that I get to witness. I wonder if the seedlings at
my feet will someday stretch over the heads of my
great-great-grandchildren or if this secret place will be a parking
garage or a wasteland and trees will be beyond memory. And I feel such
love and protectiveness for this massive system which is dying, but I
cannot save it and I am filled with despair.
I stand
and breathe in the oxygen these trees are making for me. I exhale some
carbon for them. We feed each other. I feel so whole in the green
silences, as I always do, as if I found something I forgot I was
missing. In the wildness, I can let myself be me in a way I cannot in
the world of people. The trees watch me with no judgment, no agenda, and
I whisper promises we cannot keep to the leaves that flutter like
fragments of paper above me. We could learn from the trees, ways of
being that could save our souls. To watch and listen and let others be.
To stand firm, but without malice or judgment. To understand our place
and the larger picture we fit into. To love without destruction. I want
to fill myself with the trees, with their knowledge and patience and
beauty, and carry it with me like a talisman against all of the things I
cannot change. I lift my arms above my head, like a child begging to be
picked up, waiting to be anointed. Trying to slip my fingers into this
awesome silence, offering my prayers and holy words to the caverns of
leaves and branches above.
The sun is low. As I turn
and walk on, the chime of bells from a campus building swells into the
silence, the capstone of the sanctuary's architecture. There is still
hope. There has to be.
"Look and listen for the
welfare of the whole people and have always in view not only the present
but also the coming generations, even those whose faces are yet beneath
the surface of the ground- the unborn of the future Nation." ~ The Constitution of the Iroquois Nations
I missed this post last year. So glad I did not miss it this year!!
ReplyDeleteThanks Mrs. Zarnikow. I'm glad too! Writing this made me so happy- one of those pieces that just flow from the fingers.
DeleteAh how lovely! I'm taking a deep breath too.........
ReplyDeleteThank you Catherine!
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