There is no outside of nature. –Ed Roberson

There are times when I fear the distance of the past

& sit with the collapse. Forget who I am

while in an office too far above the soil.

 

I sit at a desk writing words – insisting

to find meaning elsewhere on a page insisting to be

& not see what has been forgotten.

 

Our elders the Bald Cypress trees

standing generations wide & tall

in low swampy water, that is too my body.

 

My body, the tree, & my body, the water

a crosshatch of generations South

across time, in time, through time.

 

I will call this history a verb of light or a home within a hand

pointing north like the winter thinned branches

poking the sky from a view on my back stoop.

 

Nature renames meaning for a home.

Where my toes feel the morning sun against cool grass

& I become the mama bird bringing cotton balls

 

from someone’s trash up the street,

to a nest higher than my memory of self.

Every morning, those smaller birds sing me awake,

 

declaring I must be careful – be careful

of times you choose to remember

& when you choose not to see yourself

 

elemental. And then they tell me

to think of her too; the Mississippi River

her wide tongue sketching a new portrait

 

licking the coastal bed clean; procreant.

Remember, they say, when collective souls once moved deep

down the River in ancestral sound of themselves?

 

Their prayers beyond, beyond –

approaching lands echoing their call

& just for a split second their golden-brown faces lifted,

 

feeling the warmth of a rising sun

& grew wings like southern monarchs

to fly beyond, beyond insisting on home.