Saturday, September 14, 2013

9/14/13 Simmering With The World


When I get out of my car, I walk up the rise of the arroyo edging our part of the Connecticut River, and peer over the top of that expanse as it flows by, that magnificent lasting phenomena of nature, it reminds me of when I was a kid.

Arriving,  all of us in the crowded station wagon, at the beach. Spilling out of the car.  Filling my arms with baskets and tubes and babies and reaching for the small sweet hands of toddlers. And slowly making our determined way through the hot, deep sand, up the dune, to the very top, where we would catch that first awe inspiring view of a mysterious, unpredictable, broad ocean.

When I got a little older, I learned what the earth looks like ; learned that all the earth’s oceans and rivers connect…touch each other. And long before I heard about molecules and chemical reactions and the way that bacteria encounter antibiotics, sharing the information at an incredible speed with millions of their kind, a reaction rippling with ease through your body to ensure their own immunity, I felt  that connectedness inside of me. Happening.

 I had the sense that when my foot touched those frightening, wild, frigid waters, I was somehow connected with every bit of earth’s waters, every surface that touched a shore, the world over.

I would stand there,  numb and blue footed, watching the thick salted New England waves ,wading in its painful rocky shallows, by its unrepentant undertow, and just feel that connection move right through my being.

Like all of us, I never thought of speaking of it. I never wondered what it was that was happening. Because in childhood, often, there are far too many things happening. 

But it did teach me to quietly meet, and greet, and stand, as the ships passed quietly by on the distant horizon, and inside of me simmered that feeling - of the world over.





Tuesday, September 10, 2013

9.10.13 Against Us


Sometimes we seem to feel the day turn against us.

It turns against us and pulls and twists and chafes
and within it we feel all aground, scraped, listless
ocean gone, waves gone, left only the
pale grey dusk and the
cold bland sand as it
sinks beneath our
wet cold shoes as we

stand peering out to the
waters that moved us as we
gaze with surprise at our
grounding as we

have not the strength for imagining more than
is in our hands, at our feet, in the wind.