I’m six hours in the future,
timezone-wise.
The grass here is vibrant,
echoes of life and care.
The river hums beside me.
A ring I bought in London is sinking there;
it kept turning my finger blue.
The air tastes of waffles and tourism.
Halfway through the garden a sign reads:
Schietwilg — Salix alba —Wilgenfamilie,
a plaque introducing an array of trees
lined alongside me like a firing squad.
Small trunks extend to twelve feet in height,
then patches of dirt sit where the
branches should sprout,
and another smaller tree sits on top of it.
I got into Emory with an essay about
how well trees coexist. People, not so much.
How stems are the best patriots,
though they don’t have much of a choice.
These trees live not only with one another
but between one another,
roots twisted in their stems,
plunging forever into the Earth.
In class, a girl who didn’t like me once wrote
“Things can not exist intertwined.”
But here they are, wrapped within their woes,
simple as they stretch to the sky.
What I wouldn’t give to see her face now.
Very beautiful my darling Chris