I saw you standing on the icy edge your toes dipped in the water watching fish go by with one holy eye and Wood Ducks with the other- I stopped and lingered for awhile, watched ducks play all around you yet never did you bat an eye but stayed the way I found you - And I would have stayed forevermore believe me, if I could, become the River the rocky shore, a tree among the wood - Your knees they bent your feathers twitched you looked me in the eye, One of us must leave You said, Tis either you or I - I knew the answer to that riddle I pedaled off alone, The River, to me, is a place to go for You it is a home - I rode back to the City, watched men building ever higher ordered my coffee and my beer to tame the need inside me - I sit outside to feel the cold to think about the weather, I miss the sky and the mountain view far off in the distance, the Willow Tree at the waterpark came down with no resistance (and what about the other one on the other side of the bridge? They cut it down, it was in the way and getting much too big) - I step inside amongst the books and all the thoughts inside them, such a convenient place to hide from a world all but forgotten - Yet all the while I sit and think, You’re down there at the water, hunting fish as you’ve always done, as will your sons and daughters.
Heron watercolor by Beth Lighthouse