We like to say that stillness comes with night That on hot summer evenings we can hear God breathe But I disagree.
Summer nights, beautiful as they come, Are filled with crickets, cicadas, birds of prey, and the sound of growing They smell of burnt marshmallows and laughter Bursting with life, Loud and exuberant. No, summer nights are not still.
It is in winter, When death and slumber rule the woods, Where even our breath is muffled by the cold, Frozen into puffs of clouds. The night does not sing as summer, Cicadas and crickets and owls and coyotes Calling out in the heat. No. Silence basks in moonlight on a bed of leaves That tucked the summer away in their fall.
It is here that we find the still in the night The quiet so deep we must look inward for sound Heartbeats and whispers of breath, Memories filling our inner ear, Unable to keep the quiet. But when calmed, When frozen still by the cold, You can hear it, The throbbing in the dirt, The heartbeat of the earth, The subtle zephyrs through naked trees The breath of gods.