remembered to the land
The day I read:
“the land remembers you, even when you are lost,”
I stopped,
lowered the book,
and wept for every speck of dirt
left behind in places where I left my name,
ragged and bleeding,
while newly, unfurled leaves of wild strawberries –
heart berries –
wrapped themselves around those ragged edges to hold me fast
so I would not disappear.
The land who remembered me,
remembered my bare back on thin blankets,
the delicate summer evening I bargained my virginity
for “coolness.”
It remembered deep February nights –
beyond frigid –
when Aurora Borealis crackled my name to Sky Father and all the Star People.
My dog and I audience to the magnificence of light against dark.
I had lost myself from those days
when that land daily whispered how deeply I was loved
I had lost the voice of those ruddy Mountain Ash guarding the house –
then twigs –
now sentinels so wide I cannot embrace them
and touch my fingertips around the other side.
Upon my return,
to bring my mother home:
ashes to ashes
dust to dust;
those heart berries were the only ones to know me…
that tamed land now wild again…
I could hear my name –
faintly –
in those grasses,
as in the days when I was certain no one did.
Blessed be those little leaves
and the lands who hold us closest.
(c) r. l. elke