I wish you’d let the sky shine bright for you. It’s so blue outside, the good kind. Move the curtains to the side, sneak a glimpse, Sip the air slowly and whistle it out. Step carefully so you can hear the porch steps creak and feel the wood under your bare feet without worrying about the splinters. There aren’t any. Just come outside.
The fields will part when the time is right, and the sky will illuminate the guiding side. And when you find that the earth can hold your weight, that the world won’t collapse when you confess your fate, you’ll see how the clouds shield you just the right way from the hard rays of the sun, but you can still see the glow. And it may time some time, your feet may burn and sore, Blister even, maybe, but time heals all wounds, I swear, Even the worst of heartaches. Even my heart is breathing again, slowly. It is
pumping. Just consider that if glass shards can be glued back together, mirrors hung back on the wall for Snow White to get ready in, and the veins in my wrist sealed back up with love and rain, there is another day for you to see. I am not porcelain. I am weak, But every time I am broken to the ground, I rise like the willow tree. There’s a reason she’s my favorite— For she haunts her pleasures and cries all day, But seeps her sorrows into the ground till her spirit Rises back up through her veins. The rings of the tree reflect not just her age, but her strife. This woman has been broken. She’s crumbled yet rised.
She never dies, only cries. The willow tree will always survive.