Lately I can recall the scent of damp wheat grass, and smears of red clay on my calves, at the end of each day when I wandered home accidentally *****, and purposefully human; a child of the earth who found unity, easily.
Bury me back in the moss garden, and carve my name on the stones where I once crushed berries and painted my cheeks, as an adolescent nomad celebrating dirt and singing for sky, while the cows were my companions and the birds, my messengers of joy.
Take me back there one day, to rest in final slumber. Then, perhaps I can feel the ceaseless wonder that once I felt when I brushed my hand against the bark of a tree, if now this life can no longer give me as much.