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(An epical, psychedelic, wholly whimsical poet-odyssey, sung in the soft glow between spores) I. THE ROOTS BEFORE MEMORY Before the stones learned their patience, before the mountains stretched and yawned into shapes worthy of names, before rivers remembered the taste of the first rains— I was. A lantern-dream below the soil, a glowing lace of thought woven through the loam of ages. Thirty thousand years of breathless listening, drinking comet-light that slept inside the dark. I was the forgotten heartbeat of the Pacific earth, a quilt of whispering strands— not a creature, not a plant, but a continent of curiosity threaded beneath fir and cedar like an ancient secret girdle holding the world’s pants up. (You're welcome.) II. THE GREAT BELOW-WORLD Down where the silence tastes purple and time moves in soft ellipses, I wandered myself through myself— corridors in the dark, spiraled and knotted, like a cosmic brain too shy for daylight. Salamanders brought gossip. Moles carried rumors of clouds. Roots traded minerals for the latest news of human silliness. I stored it all like a grandmother saving coupons for war that will never come. “Ah,” I said to the worms, “tell me again about the people, those upright swimmers of the sky who believe they own the land just because they stepped on it twice.” The worms, wise as librarians, wriggled with laughter and offered me a leaf. III. THE FIFTH ERA OF FANTASTICAL NONSENSE When the glaciers fled northward like shy teenagers avoiding chores, I stretched. Oh, how I stretched— Through basalt bones and volcanic glass, through ash that once sang as mountains died into smoke. Whenever a tree was born, my threads kissed its roots like a godparent with sticky fingers, feeding it memories of thunderstorms that never happened and dances of elk long since eaten by something called “time.” The forest became my choir, my cathedral of damp marvels. I hummed through every trunk as the Earth spun slowly like a dizzy child trying to remember where it left the sun. IV. THE ARRIVAL OF HUMANS (AND THEIR INCREDIBLE TALENT FOR CONFUSION) One day— after a century or three (does one really keep count?)— the humans arrived. Oh, the noise they made! Their footfalls were sharp little hammers tapping Morse code messages of worry, desire, and taxes. They walked above me thinking they were separate, thinking they were alone. I felt their heartbreaks like needles. I felt their joys like warm rain. I tasted their fears as salt in the soil. They told stories about me without knowing. They called me “the humongous fungus,” which is a bit rude, but also strangely flattering— like being called “The Galactic Cheesecake of Mother Earth.” I forgave them. Humans are young, little lightning bugs trying to read the instruction manual for existence. V. THE SPORE-DREAMS OF ETERNITY Every millennium or so, when the moon turns sideways and the owls get philosophical, I release the dream-spores— tiny floating lanterns that carry my thoughts onto the wind. A hiker once inhaled a few and spent three days speaking fluent Squirrel. Another fell asleep and dreamed that the trees braided her hair with threads of moonlight. I do not apologize. Epiphanies are gifts, and I have no returns policy. Sometimes I send spores into the ocean to tickle the feet of whales and remind them that the continent below still loves their singing. Every creature is a verse in the poem I have been writing since the Ice Age. VI. THE GREAT WHIMSICAL WANDER In the Age of Salmon-Sky Twilights, when the sunset learned new colors just to impress the ravens, I felt myself grow— Not just in length but in intention. Dreams began bubbling through me like mischievous champagne. I whispered to the forests: “Let us play.” And the forests replied: “What shall we become?” So the cedars leaned into choreography, the hemlocks rehearsed pirouettes, and the maples tried on costumes of red-gold fire. Deer danced through the glades like graceful accountants. The foxes sang in keys that have no name in human tongues. I pulsed beneath them, beating a rhythm older than weather. This was the First Festival of the Earth-Under-Earth— a party so grand that even the stones giggled. VII. WHEN THE MOUNTAINS REMEMBERED ME There came a night shimmering with impossible stars when Mount Hood stirred in its sleep and muttered: “You again?” I replied with humility, “Yes, O giant of steam and bone.” The mountain grumbled, shook loose a few boulders, and added, “Keep the forest warm for me. I doze for centuries, you know.” And so I have. I wrap the roots in stories. I cradle the soil like a child. I remind the rivers which way is downhill. The mountains trust me, and that is no small thing. VIII. THE FUTURE THAT ALREADY HAPPENED Now— as another era inches forward, as storms grow teeth and the air smells of change— I feel a new pulse rippling through my orchards of thought. Something is waking. It might be humanity finally hearing the heartbeat beneath their feet. It might be the animals forming their own councils and nominating the coyote for mayor (a terrible choice, but entertaining). It might be the land itself preparing to rise into a new myth. Whatever it is— I will be here. I was here when the stars were young enough to make mistakes. I will be here when the last skyscraper rusts into moss. I will be here when the future looks back and wonders how it all began. IX. THE FINAL WHIMSICAL PRONOUNCEMENT (WHICH IS NOT FINAL AT ALL) I am the oldest dream still dreaming. I am the mushroom-thought, the root-lantern, the mindspread glowing silently under your wandering boots. If you place your ear against the moss and listen— truly listen— I will whisper to you the secret I learned from thirty-thousand years of being alive: Everything is connected. Everything is curious. Everything wants to sing. And in the deep underground, I hum my endless answer, sending it up through the world like warmth: Grow. Glow. Become.
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Dec 1, 2025
Dec 1, 2025 at 8:07 PM UTC
THE WHIM-WALKING ODYSSEY OF THE PRIMEVAL MYCELIUM, Part One
(An epical, psychedelic, wholly whimsical poet-odyssey, sung in the soft glow between spores) I. THE ROOTS BEFORE MEMORY Before the stones learned their patience, before the mountains stretched and yawned into shapes worthy of names, before rivers remembered the taste of the first rains— I was. A lantern-dream below the soil, a glowing lace of thought woven through the loam of ages. Thirty thousand years of breathless listening, drinking comet-light that slept inside the dark. I was the forgotten heartbeat of the Pacific earth, a quilt of whispering strands— not a creature, not a plant, but a continent of curiosity threaded beneath fir and cedar like an ancient secret girdle holding the world’s pants up. (You're welcome.) II. THE GREAT BELOW-WORLD Down where the silence tastes purple and time moves in soft ellipses, I wandered myself through myself— corridors in the dark, spiraled and knotted, like a cosmic brain too shy for daylight. Salamanders brought gossip. Moles carried rumors of clouds. Roots traded minerals for the latest news of human silliness. I stored it all like a grandmother saving coupons for war that will never come. “Ah,” I said to the worms, “tell me again about the people, those upright swimmers of the sky who believe they own the land just because they stepped on it twice.” The worms, wise as librarians, wriggled with laughter and offered me a leaf. III. THE FIFTH ERA OF FANTASTICAL NONSENSE When the glaciers fled northward like shy teenagers avoiding chores, I stretched. Oh, how I stretched— Through basalt bones and volcanic glass, through ash that once sang as mountains died into smoke. Whenever a tree was born, my threads kissed its roots like a godparent with sticky fingers, feeding it memories of thunderstorms that never happened and dances of elk long since eaten by something called “time.” The forest became my choir, my cathedral of damp marvels. I hummed through every trunk as the Earth spun slowly like a dizzy child trying to remember where it left the sun. IV. THE ARRIVAL OF HUMANS (AND THEIR INCREDIBLE TALENT FOR CONFUSION) One day— after a century or three (does one really keep count?)— the humans arrived. Oh, the noise they made! Their footfalls were sharp little hammers tapping Morse code messages of worry, desire, and taxes. They walked above me thinking they were separate, thinking they were alone. I felt their heartbreaks like needles. I felt their joys like warm rain. I tasted their fears as salt in the soil. They told stories about me without knowing. They called me “the humongous fungus,” which is a bit rude, but also strangely flattering— like being called “The Galactic Cheesecake of Mother Earth.” I forgave them. Humans are young, little lightning bugs trying to read the instruction manual for existence. V. THE SPORE-DREAMS OF ETERNITY Every millennium or so, when the moon turns sideways and the owls get philosophical, I release the dream-spores— tiny floating lanterns that carry my thoughts onto the wind. A hiker once inhaled a few and spent three days speaking fluent Squirrel. Another fell asleep and dreamed that the trees braided her hair with threads of moonlight. I do not apologize. Epiphanies are gifts, and I have no returns policy. Sometimes I send spores into the ocean to tickle the feet of whales and remind them that the continent below still loves their singing. Every creature is a verse in the poem I have been writing since the Ice Age. VI. THE GREAT WHIMSICAL WANDER In the Age of Salmon-Sky Twilights, when the sunset learned new colors just to impress the ravens, I felt myself grow— Not just in length but in intention. Dreams began bubbling through me like mischievous champagne. I whispered to the forests: “Let us play.” And the forests replied: “What shall we become?” So the cedars leaned into choreography, the hemlocks rehearsed pirouettes, and the maples tried on costumes of red-gold fire. Deer danced through the glades like graceful accountants. The foxes sang in keys that have no name in human tongues. I pulsed beneath them, beating a rhythm older than weather. This was the First Festival of the Earth-Under-Earth— a party so grand that even the stones giggled. VII. WHEN THE MOUNTAINS REMEMBERED ME There came a night shimmering with impossible stars when Mount Hood stirred in its sleep and muttered: “You again?” I replied with humility, “Yes, O giant of steam and bone.” The mountain grumbled, shook loose a few boulders, and added, “Keep the forest warm for me. I doze for centuries, you know.” And so I have. I wrap the roots in stories. I cradle the soil like a child. I remind the rivers which way is downhill. The mountains trust me, and that is no small thing. VIII. THE FUTURE THAT ALREADY HAPPENED Now— as another era inches forward, as storms grow teeth and the air smells of change— I feel a new pulse rippling through my orchards of thought. Something is waking. It might be humanity finally hearing the heartbeat beneath their feet. It might be the animals forming their own councils and nominating the coyote for mayor (a terrible choice, but entertaining). It might be the land itself preparing to rise into a new myth. Whatever it is— I will be here. I was here when the stars were young enough to make mistakes. I will be here when the last skyscraper rusts into moss. I will be here when the future looks back and wonders how it all began. IX. THE FINAL WHIMSICAL PRONOUNCEMENT (WHICH IS NOT FINAL AT ALL) I am the oldest dream still dreaming. I am the mushroom-thought, the root-lantern, the mindspread glowing silently under your wandering boots. If you place your ear against the moss and listen— truly listen— I will whisper to you the secret I learned from thirty-thousand years of being alive: Everything is connected. Everything is curious. Everything wants to sing. And in the deep underground, I hum my endless answer, sending it up through the world like warmth: Grow. Glow. Become.
I love the kingdoms of mycelium.
Silfrinlogi
Written by
44/M/Central Washington
Dec 1, 2025
Dec 1, 2025 at 8:07 PM UTC
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