In the Wilderness
In the wilderness, loneliness is overcome by the guide runners
of our connections to family and friends. A good sense
of affection can replace city signs. This morning, everything
sounds like it is wrapped in willow. The weather is calm,
the air tastes like sea salt, and my skin runs with the oil
of myrtle leaves. All paths are thinking about summer grass.
Grey, dusty gravel roads and iron-infused stones in creeks cross
winding canyon floral greens to home. Open doors have music
inside meandering around all of the listening faces.
Rhodendran dreams and huckleberry hopes unhook
from holes, rocks behind mosses, and new bark
over old winter storm scars. Full pitchers of iced tea
and half-drunken bottles of hard cider in the afternoon sun swing
amber streams of light on the hinges of our family reunion
and potluck memories. Fall out of an inner tube on an incoming tide,
knock over a wood fence in a game of catch, and carry
all the grass—wet, bare feet can hold—along the distance from just right
of the old apple tree and slightly beyond the year’s suffering and loss.