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.


ONLY A BRANCH

I am only a branch
I am moved by the wind
When a bird finds my perch
I am likely to bend

But I curve and I stretch
And I know, from the root
That I have what I need
To sprout leaves and bear fruit


SNOW

It is icy up here
And the night has been long
I haven’t heard cheer
Or the little bird’s song
The dark makes it colder
Oh, the shadows of night
I’m not seeing gladness
Or the little bird’s flight

How do I wish morning
Would make itself known
When eyes would peer out
From the tucked-in, hushed home
They’d see me, and smile
Oh, how bright it becomes
When the little bird sings
At the sight of the sun

Then with the warmth
And with the glow
I become water
When once I was snow
I fall from this branch
But all the way down
I’ll see the bird dance
And hear its sweet sound