Mother Rock, I sit solidly on the porch as the May wind blows the lanterns. Like the family stone, I hold this space while the children's lives soldier on to the fields of hearts where swords and shields penetrate and cover, where new blood is drawn.
I am finally finished playing in the war. My position is still, as the wind washes past my solid form. This day moves all around me, with me washing away, eroding with each brush of every breeze, my blue jeans fading in sunshine, my gray hair streaking as it lingers to my shoulders.