Bluff Trail
Ochs Gateway, Lookout Mountain, GA
It is early morning –
The sun is casting life
to the eastern mountainside.
I've come down a westside trail
with a hope for warmth to come.
The trail is my labrynth –
A going into with stillness,
to this overlooking center.
I will return again –
To where the woods begin or end;
depending on the traveling.
(Interstate 24, in a parallel distance,
is a reminder of my going back).
Yet, for now,
the rustle of dry, wilted leaves
are in the foreground.
I lean against an oak,
with a bowing white pine at my side,
the cool earth below me,
the shadow of the mountain I sit upon
retreating toward me in the valley below.
A passage of time –
In leaning, sitting, retreating.
they are my present reality.
Then is not all my labrynth?
My wife, my children, my place –
All going into with stillness,
to an overlooking center.
In the foreground of my mind –
I hear her laugh,
the children wrestle like two cubs,
the shadows all get smaller.
It is early morning –
The sun is casting life
to the eastern mountainside.
I've come down a westside trail
with a hope for warmth to come.
The trail is my labrynth –
A going into with stillness,
to this overlooking center.
I will return again –
To where the woods begin or end;
depending on the traveling.
(Interstate 24, in a parallel distance,
is a reminder of my going back).
Yet, for now,
the rustle of dry, wilted leaves
are in the foreground.
I lean against an oak,
with a bowing white pine at my side,
the cool earth below me,
the shadow of the mountain I sit upon
retreating toward me in the valley below.
A passage of time –
In leaning, sitting, retreating.
they are my present reality.
Then is not all my labrynth?
My wife, my children, my place –
All going into with stillness,
to an overlooking center.
In the foreground of my mind –
I hear her laugh,
the children wrestle like two cubs,
the shadows all get smaller.
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