I tripped on the branch,
Of that elder tree
That swayed in the softest breeze
And faltered its leaves in the suffocation of silence.
My skin peeled a deep red,
And its leaves, waving in the wind
Embellished my skin with a soft green
And mixed with the red of my blood.
I watched it sink into me,
And how it healed my wounds
And the waters of my being stopped flowing
In that moment, I was new.
The tears of the tree,
That fell from its branches
Soothed my tattered body
But in despair, I could not do the same
They fell on the rings,
My tears, trickling past each one
Till it had reached the middle
Where they sunk deep inside of that stump
The trees don’t sway,
In that summer breeze of the west wind
As they clutch onto their peeling skin
The trust is lost.
To know what to say,
To those that fear our hands,
And shudder in silence as we walk past them
“Hold onto them, they give us life.”
Out of necessity at the implication of our denial
We stand under what once would have healed
And nurtured our own,
With a drop of its fruit.
And even the calling of the hands from above,
Could not remedy the pain felt
As we watched them burn in the night
And satisfy our fears of the unseen.