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ksargent131
It is easy – easier – to imagine that at the first stirring of the breeze, Everything ought to be thrown to the wind. The tides are going out But does that mean that everything on the shore will be swept away? When I feel the gurgle of the waves on my feet, is it feasible that God does not intend for me to be drowned? I stand in a pool of possibility: Root myself deeper in the sand, or surrender myself to the sea. I think My mother worries about me, 300 miles away, because in our Distance she senses dissonance. I am the rock face bruised by the wind – But only because I want to be. She is the lighthouse entreating me to come in Off the water’s edge, and join her where it is safe and light and where she can Train her gaze on me in all my darkest days. Am I tempted? Her unblinking eye Implores me to be honest. How far must I cast my beams for you to find me? The spray of salt reaches my side before I can answer, and brine beats Light in this race. Storms come and go, and I watch them and hope For the sake of my mother that when I cry, it goes unheard under The squall. The wind and waves, unrelenting, ground me in humility. After all, when a sea-weary sailor spots a lighthouse, does his hand Quiver on the tiller to change his course, or does the quiet thrilling thought of home Encompass him, comfort him, call him to stay steady ahead! We steer clear of the lighthouse: we keep our eyes level, Our emotions at bay, and clew our sails for the cliff, A brooding entity rising out of the ocean, recalcitrant: resistant. My mother keeps my flame burning from another state. Tender stoking, stalwart tending. I stand tall not because I know she sees me, but because I can see her doing the same, Daring the sea to stifle her laugh, her light.
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Oct 18, 2017
Oct 18, 2017 at 12:53 AM UTC
My mother, the keeper
It is easy – easier – to imagine that at the first stirring of the breeze, Everything ought to be thrown to the wind. The tides are going out But does that mean that everything on the shore will be swept away? When I feel the gurgle of the waves on my feet, is it feasible that God does not intend for me to be drowned? I stand in a pool of possibility: Root myself deeper in the sand, or surrender myself to the sea. I think My mother worries about me, 300 miles away, because in our Distance she senses dissonance. I am the rock face bruised by the wind – But only because I want to be. She is the lighthouse entreating me to come in Off the water’s edge, and join her where it is safe and light and where she can Train her gaze on me in all my darkest days. Am I tempted? Her unblinking eye Implores me to be honest. How far must I cast my beams for you to find me? The spray of salt reaches my side before I can answer, and brine beats Light in this race. Storms come and go, and I watch them and hope For the sake of my mother that when I cry, it goes unheard under The squall. The wind and waves, unrelenting, ground me in humility. After all, when a sea-weary sailor spots a lighthouse, does his hand Quiver on the tiller to change his course, or does the quiet thrilling thought of home Encompass him, comfort him, call him to stay steady ahead! We steer clear of the lighthouse: we keep our eyes level, Our emotions at bay, and clew our sails for the cliff, A brooding entity rising out of the ocean, recalcitrant: resistant. My mother keeps my flame burning from another state. Tender stoking, stalwart tending. I stand tall not because I know she sees me, but because I can see her doing the same, Daring the sea to stifle her laugh, her light.
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25
Each year, we arrive at the same knot of woods, having drawn the same straw. We grasp, trembling, at what we imagine to be certain death: A leaf, edges curved up, orange crudely splashed across green. But would you spare a second thought for the falling leaf that subsumes your life? Think. Why would the world continuously dash herself Into pieces, render herself to ash, if she were not made of Such stuff as phoenixes? Nature goes up into flames each year With little to no ado, and heals herself without fuss. Leaves throw themselves from great heights not in pursuit of ruination but of Revival. Year after year after year we are asked this much: Allow me to unfurl the fist with which you are clinging to this tree. Comfort lies in confiding, confessing, and conceding. There is no need to be Stronger than the Earth’s heart when she is offering it up To you so singularly. Grant yourself this: that she wants you to Smile and shine and grow. Do you fear your fate in this moment? You misinterpret. The blameful breeze you imagine you feel is, in actuality, Earth’s unremitting whisper, pressed into your skin: “Do as the leaves do. Follow, and fall. You are forgiven.”
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Oct 16, 2017
Oct 16, 2017 at 11:52 AM UTC
Atonement, autumn.