LIVING ON A MOUNTAIN

I can see mountains from my window. They’re like a painting dusted with peaches and purples. It’s late in the day, and I can hear the wind whooshing as the clouds move swiftly by. As the sun descends, the mountain peaks hold onto the last bit of glow that it offers. I know that from here, those mountains appear to be only dust, rock, and trees, but there is a bounty of life there. From here, I can’t see the life beaming, but I know that it’s there. There are rabbits, deer, lizards, snakes, mountain lions, coyotes, bees, ants, beetles, scorpions. I know this because I live on a mountain. As the sun continues its race, the mountains have grown darker, and all I can see is the outline of its peaks and boulders against the dimming sky. The painting has become one lump of deep blue. But again, I know that there are an abundance of colors dancing there: greens, golds, silvers, browns. The sun has spotted the clouds with red-orange, and the wind continues its song — the one that sometimes wakes me up at night. That can happen when you live on a mountain. It’s always new — this painted sky, these sounding winds, the beauty of the fading sun. I’ve lived on this mountain for over a year, but it always feels new.


AT REST

I love what You’ve made
Every creature I see
The tan, furry face
The content, buzzing bee
The flowers that open
On the branch of a tree
And the doves that dive low
Overhead, over me

I love that the sky
Opens up in a spot
And the sun, it shoots through
The thick fog that it fought
Where the blue is so welcome
And the light that it brought
Reminds me that joy
It’s still there, like I thought

Father, help me to see
That today, it is new
That You made the flower
And You made the blue
That nothing could buzz
Or dive without You
That nothing can open
Unless you tell it to

Sometimes I forget
That the small things are big
That the dark becomes light
That the day grows the fig
That at rest I can see
Where for treasure, to dig
That the tree sings Your song
Every branch, every twig