Like a hunter fitting an arrow to the bow I am trying to find the shortest distance to you. Like a meandering vine growing towards the sun, Like a wave lapping the shore.
Light rays like arrows pierce the restless waves, Refract and come to rest, or illuminate, the creatures of the dark, beneath the waves.
I am trying to find the shortest distance to you Like rain pelting the earth Like the compass needle’s restless swing toward the pole
Water bears the weight of ice. The petal withstands the sway of the honeybee. The branch bears the weight of the nest, and even the tree trunk yields to the blade of the axe and then resurfaces— to do what love must do: Bear, believe, hope and endure— enlarging the capacity to embrace, setting down tree rings like tracks— the living bark the antidote to injury.
Within the tree, rings enclose and transform injury to possibility.
Rain, like love, makes the crooked way straight. Though unpredictable at times, love wears down the rock, but nonetheless, as any unrequited lover will confess, some hearts remain as closed as granite.
Everything hangs on love like the door on its hinge. Everything rests on love like the water strider on the pond ripples.
Like a carpenter planing a plank of wood, love makes the rough way smooth.
Like the sun at daybreak shining on the battlefield, love never gives up.
The sky is most beautiful as it tackles the dark— when light bends, curving like the arc of red-tailed hawk’s wing. Daybreak or day’s end, the horizon pools with color oozing like fruit ripening on the branch.
Though the shadow falls on the tree, when the shade lifts her wing, the leaf is still green, and tender, and ready to breathe, and bear light.