Friday, April 8, 2016

4.8.16 If, for you,

And, yes, if for you , 
coming to visit these things, borne of quiet, 
brings you to a peaceful moment in your morning  
or a small place to land , come nightfall 
why then yes, I'm so glad.
And thank you for your notes.


 

4.8.16 Here we are



As the day rounds itself in for a close, down by the Connecticut, the wind is chilly and brisk, so that when you step out onto the path that follows it's long winding causeway, you take a little care, for certain. 
Overhead, one quiet lone Mallard flies by, their strong wings efficiently cutting into the air, as they purposefully make their way to their destination.
Down below, bits and pieces of people, alone or in groups, fondly traverse the familiar muddy trail, pointing out all of the debris in the waters, from the most recent spring cleansing of the banks.
Gazing across the whitecaps, that even we, far inland, have ,at times.
Here ,in this place of rushing waters and blustering wind and the far off treetops waving in the breeze, each of us in our own place remembers being in places like this.
As we slowly go about the ending of our day, 
either collapsing and finding something or anything to eat,
or going about quietly making things right, and then leaning in
 to Friday's end.


4.8.16 Small things


Small dreams
of small miracles
of small places.




4.8.16 What we've been given

Sometimes, interwoven with solid pragmatism, we learn to live lives of determined optimism. 
Which changes everything. 
We learn to live that feeling inside of us, knowing some of the possible score , and then going ahead and living and breathing and smiling and acting the possibility. 
While we reside in what we've been given, today.


 

4.8.16 Playing near you

Only last week, down by the farmer's fields, 
it was cold and raw-fingered windy;



It was a turn-your-reddened-face-from-the-painful-frozen-winds cold. Funny how things change, and quickly. How you can go from easy-peasy mild mannered days of sneakers and polar fleece and meandering along just so, to a coat-ripping snowstorm arriving as you stumble forward one morning , as you turn to greet April. 
But maybe that's why I love New England so. 
Because the weather mirrors happenstance, and never rests 
long enough to forget . 
That all kinds of crap are most probably just around the corner, 
playing at a someplace near you.