It is all so close to nothing this morning,
the long hours of teaching, the coming home
to plant in thunder and heat lightening
until the sky breaks open and I’m soaked.
Inside, I bathe, dry off, then go back
to grading essays for the thirtieth year in a row.
I taught all July, students from Sudan,
Germany, Palestine, Syria, Korea, the UK.
I am at home among my students. Among
the semesters that pass like a nomad’s tents,
folded and unfolded, another mile
walking the dog, another poem.
My own history stays with me, its borders
increasing, the population of days larger,
each minute a seedling I lift gently
from the plastic flat, brushing soil
from the roots, whispering grow,
planting tendrils into new ground.
Lovely poem of intense tenderness toward the aching self. I really connect with this. Thanks for writing it.
Rachel,
Thanks so much for your beautiful note! Katherine
Katherine, Your experience here opens us to a wide, wide world. Thank you!
Marijo, thank so much for reading!
“Each minute a seedling…” Fabulous!
Thank you Marilyn! I’m so glad you like it!
Tendrils are such a wonderful image, and the nomad’s tents of semesters. Thanks for this poem.
Thanks Tiffany, T, for this note!
Perfect title! Tendrías can be insidiois.and menacing or embracing and a sign of growing. Isolating or spreading out. Thanks.
Thanks so much for taking the time to read, Irene!
Katherine, Congratulations. I love this poem!!
Judy Kelly
Thank you Judy!
Lovely images. A moving and beautiful poem.
Thank you!