He is walking slowly where step by step measure by measure in the lush meadow he plays a dulcet meandering air inviting me to join him there unbound by dark and foreboding forces of the viral pervasive present.
I join him and we fly to the open plain recently refreshed by rain Oklahoma and its green fields where the spirits of Native peoples reside and in soft spring breezes glide and remember their ancestors’ names and the simple childhood games they played kicking up dust of earth in earshot of their mothers who gave birth to those precious souls and bodies brown made of love and Red River and ground.
The flute’s tune again catches me in its lively streaming strain and pulls me up to airy heights to join the dance of darkness and light in spirit realms where beauty and reality tango together in peace.
I bow to spiritual writer and mystic Richard Rohr and Kiowa, Pulitzer Prize winning author, painter and poet N. Scott Momaday who grew up in Oklahoma and once said “Realism is not what it’s cracked up to be.”