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robert-e-moore
I know it’s good advice to look outside, to walk – to minimize the price of time spent on a rock – I know deep in my gut that fate depends on chance, and time spent on my **** drifts in an endless dance. A song glides in the air. A song drifts in my mind – The one outside is spare. It cannot be defined by notes placed on a page. It cannot be rewound – It only sets the stage for music to be found.
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Dec 12, 2016
Dec 12, 2016 at 5:09 PM UTC
A Song
The low points on the Earth are rich in rain, and at the poles blue ice and snow, and as it spins, there is no loss or gain of matter. Wind and water blow above the peaks of mountains. Glaciers store fresh water, then control its flow   across bare rocks uplifted long before a pair of eyes would come to know how changes on the land and in the seas unfold until they’re fixed to grow a redwood or a biome filled with these, and shifts on Earth are not too slow to satisfy the thirst of living cells, or dig up what it is their story tells.
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Jul 21, 2016
Jul 21, 2016 at 12:50 PM UTC
Layers
Of all that I have seen, Of all that I have done, I think the color green is one of seven tones I’d like to nurture most So I can feed on light and cultivate a force to last me through the night.
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Jul 20, 2016
Jul 20, 2016 at 2:01 PM UTC
Colors
A hummingbird zips by—metallic green— Its eyes examines pastel reds and pinks. It rises slowly, hovers, then it thinks to move where other backyard birds are seen perched low in nearby trees while heavy drops pelt leaves, where claws grip branches thick and thin, where balance comes to those who know they’re in the safest place until the rainfall stops. When raindrops fall the birds don’t chat or sing. They may be fast asleep or in a daze. The looming weather shifts, but never stays. Like time, a storm is only a passing thing. Birds get along with little—wet or dry, They rest until they know it’s time to fly.
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Jul 17, 2016
Jul 17, 2016 at 8:54 AM UTC
Refuge
I woke up standing in the backyard of the house I lived in when I was fourteen. I was looking up at the window where my brothers and I shared a bedroom. I don’t know why I expected the light to be on. I hadn’t lived there in forty-five years. The two-story house, the red brick facade, the garage with a staircase and attic, the tall maple trees, the hedges surrounding the backyard, everything about the yard and house was as I remembered it. I was looking up, waiting for the light to come on. The air felt cool on my face. It must have been a summer evening. I wish I hadn’t taken the twenty-dollar bill that I found in the top drawer of my parent’s dresser.
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Jul 14, 2016
Jul 14, 2016 at 8:57 AM UTC
Flashback
The water makes apparent progress round a stone, and as it flows, it swirls beneath the tide. And as a storm comes through, propelled by daunting winds, it spawns a twister circling far and wide. And in a dream I see young bodies falling fast, faster than my dream can build a net. The air and water spin, and so do thoughts around a peace my young mind hasn’t silenced yet.
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Jul 13, 2016
Jul 13, 2016 at 10:29 AM UTC
Eddies
I was running when I came across this squirrel. I was jogging kind of slow and so was he. He leapt to the left, to the right, then he climbed a tree. I waited for his head to stretch, to curl Around the trunk and watch me as I passed. I searched for him but saw no telling sign. I studied every angle, every line. I crept up close until I had the last Square inch of wood around the tree trunk scanned. My eyes ran up the rutted bark and there— I saw no more than branches, leaves, and air. I searched for holes, for a fork where he might stand. But all I saw were lichens by the score In countless shades of green. They shared their own Unspoken statements, offered nothing known Regarding one elusive omnivore. I’m sticking to this tale though some might wince. I wish I could just let it go, I should. But I swear I saw him slip into the wood, And I’ve been looking for him ever since.
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Jul 7, 2016
Jul 7, 2016 at 1:13 PM UTC
A Close Encounter of the Sylvan Kind
While running on the road, I noticed changing patterns that looked like roads themselves devoid of all direction. Black tar was left in cracks that swirled for several meters, and then would end abruptly, and then would start again. I figure every journey has one or two transitions that could be rated smooth. But looking at the road beneath my moving feet, I think the trouble lies in chapters that don’t go as well as we had dreamed, and then the work becomes an art and grace of leaving unfinished work behind – to look for other thresholds where worth can be restored where living can be weighed   where new steps can be taken and love can bury grief.
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Jul 6, 2016
Jul 6, 2016 at 11:18 AM UTC
Road
You’ll find a turtle walking slow, or in the sea prepared to go a thousand miles before its old. It migrates without being told. You’ll find deer mostly in the deep, and every one knows when to sleep and when to stay awake to feed. They do the things they know they need. You’ll find a tree that buds in spring, and every year it leaves a ring inside a ring. It also knows to lose its leaves before it snows. And grasses grow in rocks and chert, and roots go dormant when the dirt becomes too cold for them to swell and pull cool water from a well. And rocks will weather when they thaw, and shatter when the weather’s raw, and leave behind the smallest grains to nourish all things when it rains.
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Jul 4, 2016
Jul 4, 2016 at 8:26 AM UTC
Circles
During shorter days, my eyes don’t have to strain to find a forest green. Without its leaves, it stays a yellow-green and faint, but vibrant in the rain. The wet wood wears a sheen— like iridescent paint was brushed along its bark. Cold trees seem bare and plain, but life holds firm between the short days and the dark. When little else survives, the living green remain. They simply can’t be seen when leaves disguise their lives.
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Jul 2, 2016
Jul 2, 2016 at 8:22 AM UTC
The Living Green