it was as quiet
a place where she gave her heart
as when leaves rested
alone but for sighs
of wind caressing water
and a soft birdsong
taken by a surge
deeply divined below earth
she poured herself free
Unlocked.
it was as quiet
a place where she gave her heart
as when leaves rested
alone but for sighs
of wind caressing water
and a soft birdsong
taken by a surge
deeply divined below earth
she poured herself free
I was gifted saffron
at a tender 22,
when familiar
shallots and peppers
became subpar
to the spice of discovery
of love and the city
on my tongue
-and I tasted
over and again-
until one day
alone and puzzled
in a tiny kitchen
holding a vial of saffron
(a gift from
a coworker
at my big new job
out of college),
I realized I was far from
being a grown up.
New love every week
was not filling
and cooking chicken
in wine just made me drunk
(in my sophistication,
I marinated myself).
Somehow not knowing
what to do with saffron
made me understand
I knew nothing.
Caught the aurora borealis
showing off again
for the stone circles
that dance in Scotland-
old but not old enough to be stardust-
hiding roots that look like
feet, treading sediment
while we pretend
to make stationary places
all to capture a little light.
Landlocked
and out of hibernation
remembering
licking roots
along the river’s edge
where stone
met a rush of water
just before
the squawk of a kestrel
heralded
high time to move.
pretending
the beautifully
decorated
mushroom
is meant
for me
I whisper
to a pinecone
“do you see that?”