by James Crews
   It can be painful to be so open to the world (“You may have to break your heart”), but as Bass points out, it is more than worth it “to know even one moment alive.” What truly lifts us back into the flow is noticing each small thing that sparks our senses, whether it be “the sound of an oar,” “the smell of grated ginger,” or simply “warm socks.”
   Invitation for Writing and Reflection
   What seemingly small joys bring you back to that “sudden rush of the world” even in the midst of worry or fear? How does it feel when gratitude and hope reawaken the heart to what’s around you?
   Mark Nepo
   Language, Prayer, and Grace
   Language is no more than the impressions
   left by birds nesting in snow.
   Prayer is the path opened
   by a leopard leaping through the brush.
   And grace is how the water parts for a fish
   letting it break surface.
   Jane Hirshfield
   The Fish
   There is a fish
   that stitches
   the inner water
   and the outer water together.
   Bastes them
   with its gold body’s flowing.
   A heavy thread
   follows that transparent river,
   secures it—
   the broad world we make daily,
   daily give ourselves to.
   Neither imagined
   nor unimagined,
   neither winged nor finned,
   we walk the luminous seam.
   Knot it.
   Flow back into the open gills.
   Patricia Fargnoli
   Reincarnate
   I want to come back as that ordinary
   garden snail, carting my brown-striped spiral shell
   onto the mushroom which has sprouted
   after overnight rain so I can stretch
   my tentacles toward the slightly drooping
   and pimpled raspberry, sweet and pulsing—
   a thumb that bends on its stalk from the crown
   of small leaves, weighed down by the almost
   translucent shining drop of dew I have
   been reaching and reaching toward my whole life.
   Linda Hogan
   Innocence
   There is nothing more innocent
   than the still-unformed creature I find beneath soil,
   neither of us knowing what it will become
   in the abundance of the planet.
   It makes a living only by remaining still
   in its niche.
   One day it may struggle out of its tender
   pearl of blind skin
   with a wing or with vision
   leaving behind the transparent.
   I cover it again, keep laboring,
   hands in earth, myself a singular body.
   Watching things grow,
   wondering how
   a cut blade of grass knows
   how to turn sharp again at the end.
   This same growing must be myself,
   not aware yet of what I will become
   in my own fullness
   inside this simple flesh.
   Farnaz Fatemi
   Everything Is Made of Labor
   The inchworm’s trajectory:
   pulse of impulse. The worm
   is tender. It won’t live
   long. Its green glows.
   It found a place to go.
   Arrange us with meaning,
   the words plead. Find the thread
   through the dark.
   Susan Kelly-DeWitt
   Apple Blossoms
   One evening in winter
   when nothing has been enough,
   when the days are too short,
   the nights too long
   and cheerless, the secret
   and docile buds of the apple
   blossoms begin their quick
   ascent to light. Night
   after interminable night
   the sugars pucker and swell
   into green slips, green
   silks. And just as you find
   yourself at the end
   of winter’s long, cold
   rope, the blossoms open
   like pink thimbles
   and that black dollop
   of shine called
   bumblebee stumbles in.
   Nancy Miller Gomez
   Growing Apples
   There is big excitement in C block today.
   On the window sill,
   in a plastic ice cream cup
   a little plant is growing.
   This is all the men want to talk about:
   how an apple seed germinated
   in a crack of damp concrete;
   how they tore open tea bags
   to collect the leaves, leached them
   in water, then laid the sprout onto the bed
   made of Lipton. How this finger of spring
   dug one delicate root down
   into the dark fannings and now
   two small sleeves of green
   are pushing out from the emerging tip.
   The men are tipsy with this miracle.
   Each morning, one by one,
   they go to the window and check
   the progress of the struggling plant.
   All through the day they return
   to stand over the seedling
   and whisper.
   Danusha Laméris
   Aspen
   They tower above the hilltop,
   yellow leaves rustling the air
   in a kind of muffled conversation.
   And when a breeze bends
   their upper branches
   they tilt sideways
   in the gesture of attentive listeners.
   And so, we sit together in silence,
   old friends who don’t need to speak.
   Though sometimes they murmur
   amongst themselves,
   the kind of banter that once
   soothed me as a child
   drifting off to sleep
   while my parents carried on
   upstairs, talking after dinner
   with their guests.
   Now, a red-winged blackbird
   lands on a slender branch
   and is lost among shuffling leaves.
   Now, a cloud passes overhead—
   my mother’s silk scarf
   trailing on the wind.
   Is this what it is to be alone?
   This being with my tall,
   branched sisters?
   Then let me sit
   in their lengthening shadow
   as the day wanes,
   and the hours of my life wane,
   and the evening starts to fall,
   and the night comes
   with its quiet company of stars.
   Margaret Hasse
   With Trees
   for Norton Stillman
   Something I’ve forgotten calls me away
   from the picnic table to tall trees
   at the far end of the clearing.
   I remember lying on grass
   being still, studying forks of branches
   with their thousands of leaves.
   While trees accrued their secret rings
   life spread a great canopy
   of family, work, ordinary activity.
   I mislaid what once moved me.
   Today I have time to follow
   the melody of green wherever it goes,
   a tune, maybe hummed
   when I was too young
   to have the words I wanted
   and know how a body returns
   to familiar refrains.
   Now like a child, I sit down, lie back,
   look up at the crowns of maple,
   needled spruce and a big-hearted boxwood.
   Fugitive birds dart in and out.
   In the least little wind, birch leaves turn
   and flash silver like a school of minnows.
   Clouds range in the blue
 sky
   above earth’s great geniuses
   of shelter and shade.
   Kim Stafford
   Shelter in Place
   Long before the pandemic, the trees
   knew how to guard one place with
   roots and shade. Moss found
   how to hug a stone for life.
   Every stream works out how
   to move in place, staying home
   even as it flows generously
   outward, sending bounty far.
   Now is our time to practice—
   singing from balconies, sending
   words of comfort by any courier,
   kindling our lonesome generosity
   to shine in all directions like stars.
   Heather Newman
   Missing Key
   The doors are locked and I’m searching for a way in.
   I circle my house intent on finding a crack in the system
   I painstakingly created, a loose bolt, a faulty window.
   It’s still light in Vermont but in one hour the sun will dip
   behind the mountain, temperatures will fall, and I may still
   be stuck outside, cursing. There are friends. There are neighbors.
   Or I could resolve nothing, sit on the cool grass and wait.
   On my iPhone, I view my furious attempts to break in
   recorded on the outdoor cameras. There are family members
   who hold a key, but rescues have never worked for me in the past.
   I consider places for lost or hidden keys. They say gratitude is a key.
   Solitude is a mountain. There are pines, cedars and hemlocks,
   a range against the mango-magenta horizon,
   a red-tailed hawk circling its prey.
   Michael Kiesow Moore
   Climbing the Golden Mountain
   Silence is the golden mountain.
   —Jack Kerouac
   Listen. Turn
   everything
   off. When
   the noise
   of our lives
   drifts away,
   when the
   chatter of
   our minds
   sinks into
   that perfect
   lake of nothing,
   then, oh
   then we can
   apprehend
   that golden
   mountain,
   always there,
   waiting for
   us to be
   still enough
   to hear it.
   Laura Foley
   To See It
   We need to separate to see
   the life we’ve made.
   We need to leave our house
   where someone waits for us, patiently,
   warm beneath the sheets.
   We need to don a sweater, a coat, mittens,
   wrap a scarf around our neck,
   stride down the road,
   a cold winter morning,
   and turn our head back,
   to see it—perched
   on the top of the hill, our life
   lit from inside.
   Jacqueline Jules
   Unclouded Vision
   Her lenses, implanted
   to uncloud aging eyes,
   sparkle now like a bit
   of glitter on a card,
   rhinestones on a T-shirt.
   Twinkle in her eye. An old cliché.
   Common long before
   surgery was routine, suggesting
   joy or affection—intangibles
   that lift heels off concrete,
   make us notice yellow petals
   pushing through sidewalk cracks.
   My grandmother
   now visits museums again,
   marvels at details, stops to read
   each acrylic label on the wall.
   Danusha Laméris
   Improvement
   The optometrist says my eyes
   are getting better each year.
   Soon he’ll have to lower my prescription.
   What’s next? The light step I had at six?
   All the gray hairs back to brown?
   Skin taut as a drum?
   My improved eyes and I
   walked around town and celebrated.
   We took in the letters
   of the marquee, the individual leaves
   filling out the branches of the sycamore,
   an early moon.
   So much goes downhill: joints
   wearing out with every mile,
   the delicate folds of the eardrum
   exhausted from years of listening.
   I’m grateful for small victories.
   The way the heart still beats time
   in the cathedral of the ribs.
   And the mind, watching its parade
   of thoughts, enter and leave,
   begins to see them for what they are:
   jugglers, fire swallowers, acrobats,
   tossing their batons into the air.
   Reflective Pause
   Grateful for Small Victories
   In “Improvement,” Danusha Laméris recounts the rare experience of a part of her body actually getting better with age and invites us to celebrate the good news with her. “So much goes downhill,” she says, reminding us of the body’s fragility and vulnerability. Yet she also urges us to be “grateful for small victories,” for the fact that the heart carries on “in the cathedral of the ribs,” and that the endlessly busy mind keeps sending out its “parade of thoughts.” I love the way the speaker of this poem seems to detach from her own anxieties and intrusive thoughts, even playfully seeing them as “jugglers, fire swallowers, acrobats” meant to entertain, and not to be obeyed. And in her question, “What’s next?,” I also hear the willingness to have hope that other things in her life, and in the world, might begin to improve as well.
   Invitation for Writing and Reflection
   Write your own celebration of your “small victories,” things you managed to accomplish no matter how slight they might seem. Whatever your list, try to capture that same sense of gratitude and joy for things that went well for you.
   Jack Ridl
   After Spending the Morning Baking Bread
   Our cat lies across the stove’s front burners,
   right leg hanging over the oven door. He
   is looking into the pantry where his bowl
   sits full on the counter. His smaller dish,
   the one for his splash of cream, sits empty.
   Say yes to wanting to be this cat. Say
   yes to wanting to lie across the leftover
   warmth, letting it rise into your soft belly,
   spreading into every twitch of whisker, twist
   of fur and cell, through the Mobius strip
   of your bloodstream. You won’t know
   you will die. You won’t know the mice
   do not exist for you. If a lap is empty and
   warm, you will land on it, feel an unsteady
   hand along your back, fingers scratching
   behind your ear. You will purr.
   Wally Swist
   Radiance
   Over your gray and white oval marble-top kitchen table,
   the meeting of our eyes makes the room grow brighter.
   Our faces, layer after layer, become so vibrant
   the light appears to crest in waves.
   We have become changed by it, nothing can be
   the same after it. When I bend down to touch
   the shape of deer tracks in the damp sand, it is in
   the same way I place my fingers over your body.
   When I stand beside a freshet in a meadow
   the sun catches the rings of the water’s long ripples
   in the wind, that is the same glimmer we hold
   when our eyes meet in the kitchen over
   your gray and white oval marble-top table.
   Every day for the rest of my life, yours is the face
   I want to see when I awake in the morning.
 
  Kristen Case
   Morning
   Against all probability our bulbs have blossomed,
   opened their white rooms, given their assent.
   I pull myself from your breathing to take a closer look.
   It happened overnight.
   Outside a flock of birds folds and unfolds its single body.
   I start the coffee. Light comes
   from impossible directions.
   You are still asleep.
   I cup the curve of your skull with my hand.
   Alive, sleeping.
   Light rises on the flame-colored bricks.
   Ross Gay
   Wedding Poem
   for Keith and Jen
   Friends I am here to modestly report
   seeing in an orchard
   in my town
   a goldfinch kissing
   a sunflower
   again and again
   dangling upside down
   by its tiny claws
   steadying itself by snapping open
   like an old-timey fan
   its wings
   again and again,
   until, swooning, it tumbled off
   and swooped back to the very same perch,
   where the sunflower curled its giant
   swirling of seeds
   around the bird and leaned back
   to admire the soft wind
   nudging the bird’s plumage,
   and friends I could see
   the points on the flower’s stately crown
   soften and curl inward
   as it almost indiscernibly lifted
   the food of its body
   to the bird’s nuzzling mouth
   whose fervor
   I could hear from
   oh 20 or 30 feet away
   and see from the tiny hulls
   that sailed from their
   good racket,
   which good racket, I have to say
   was making me blush,
   and rock up on my tippy-toes,
   and just barely purse my lips
   with what I realize now
   was being, simply, glad,
   which such love,
   if we let it,
   makes us feel.