Summer morning - pink jets of clouds splash out from the golden well of the east falling just short of an ebbing moon.
Streams of swallows flutter and glide over the garden - they are all flying in the same direction as if erupting
from the sun’s waking pulse. Just for a moment one of the birds hangs perfectly still - like the top-most drop of water from a fountain before it turns
to face the glittering pool. Beneath them all the hummingbird makes her rounds and a dove scratches the earth below the feeder
keeping an wary eye on the scribbling intruder. So many summer mornings - too many summer mornings I have wasted worrying about the world
and my place in it – absent from my own body and breath the cage of my ribs rising, falling, and pausing without me. Meanwhile,
another swallow stills her wings. Buoyed by an unseen breeze she is both feathered sail and cresting wave as she slices over my shoulder bearing west.