I took a walk today. As I strolled along the trail I admired the leaves that hung aloft with their colors of brillent reds, yellows, orange, pale green, and light browns. The fallen leaves crunched beneath my feet as I climbed ever higher up the winding trail.
I stopped. I shat in the woods.
I walked on.
I was lulled to a peaceful bliss by the birds chirping as they sang their last songs of the season, while a soft breeze tickled across my skin.
I saw a grey black puff among the leaves that I gently nudged with my toe. It was a tuft of fur that had loosed and raised away from the carcass of a mole, whose body had been eaten away by maggots.
I walked on.
As the winds blew and the leaves fell, I was forced to notice the aching in my bones. Like a dagger stabbing into my heart I realized that the summer of our youth was, forever gone.
I walked on.
Consuming with my eyes and ears the beauty of the autumn leaves and the melodies of the lovely little song birds, I pondered the thought that as this season is nearing the end, so too am I.
And yet, I walked on.
How soon the sweet little song birds will have flown away to a warmer place. The trees that stand so tall and proud wearing their colorful leaves like cloaks of royalty will soon stand naked and cold surrounded by rot and decay.
So my dearest brother, if by chance upon this trail you should trod, and find that I too have fallen amongst the debris of the season, roll me over, turn my eyes to the sky.
And walk on.
Let the crows pluck the eyes from my skull, and upon my flesh the maggots feast. What bones are not carried away by the beasts may they remain to be swallowed by the growth of the next season.