The comforting presence of trees grounds me.
On one of the trails with a waterfall, I sit on an
ancient rock and think fondly of you, father,
surrounded by what you loved—clean air,
the trickling sound of a gentle creek,
a verdant forest.
My journey is about finding you rather
than leaving. Joining all the old things—
timelessness, rocks over a billion years old,
and trees that could be three hundred years.
You’d be eighty-three today. I think I understand
for the first time why our people call the dead
our ancestors. Like the mountains, the uplifting
of the earth’s tectonic plates, we raise
them up each time we remember them.
So good. That sound of flowing water over billion-year-old rocks in among my most startling realizations of the strangeness of time. Instant and gone, present for a billion years. My community hosts a little tiny poetry gathering six times a year via Google Meet. The next one will happen at 3 p.m. on Monday October 16. If you’d like to read, email me at patjobe13@gmail.com. We are just down the mountain from Asheville in Forest City.