(Nine Poets Speak) The Littlest Balsam by Sara Wright

[Editors’ Note: Learn about how the “Nine Poets Speak” series came to be in place here.]

Photo by Sara Wright
Five years ago

I dug a seedling

in protest

ki’s deep green

needles

slender trunk

and roots

yielded

to sweet

spring earth

with prayers.

I believed.

One winter night

I will celebrate

your life

the lives of

thousands

with a

candlelit

spiral

of tiny white lights.

Tonight

white flames

 adorn you

old longings

and heartbreak

we share the same

root

stilled by

simple beauty

a single

reflection

of Love.

Through

you I honor

 all the rest

Greening all year

long.

I mourn

the multitudes

balsams standing

like footless soldiers

cut away from  earth

dying

to celebrate

a holiday

poisoned

by disbelief

consumption

and doing

secular

delusion.

When I

wrapped you

in white stars

I could

hardly wait

until

dusk

turned

midnight blue

shrouded

round

moon

cottony clouds

scudding across

the skies

Great Bear

hung

over your head

sky jewels

and stories

celebrating

your coming

of age

Oh fragrant

balsam

through

you I honor

All Evergreens

for those

who can’t feel

May beneficent

winds and powdery

winter snows

wrap your needles

and branches

gently, securely

 root tips sparkling

Sleep soundly

In Peace.

Ancient Mother

Father of

All Breath

Gifter of Life

be with us

let your scents

surround us

your roots

sustain us…

I beg you

in your Great Mercy

and everlasting patience

bathe us

in acceptance,

and

Natural Grace.

Author’s Note: This year I have been living in a very dark place. As usual I am protesting what is happening with the holidays that begin with Thanksgiving turkeys and the mindless murder of more trees. This holiday extends until after the first of the year when the consumer obsession that dominates our culture finally flattens out. That great maw feels like it’s swallowing me whole despite my attempts to remind myself that I was once part of this story having been brought up as a westerner.

I make it a yearly practice not to buy anything during a season that is dominated by collective greed and lack of awareness when people and animals and trees and fungi are suffering throughout the world. Instead, I choose to offer others my experiences…

But at the same time, I am exhausted. Tired of political murders and ecocide. Tired of feeling that protesting anything doesn’t matter, though I am compelled to continue on. Tired of reminding myself that I need to be grateful.

Unlike millions of others, I have enough heat, some water, food, a most loving canine companion, and a warm cabin to live in at the edge of a frozen stream and small forest fragment. I know I need to be grateful, but I have not been able to FEEL it, and this lack of feeling upsets me most of all.

On Thanksgiving I fed all my wild turkeys, taking great pleasure from their deep appreciation which they expressed through continuous twittering.

For the first time, I also decorated and lit a small balsam tree that I had planted outside my east window under a glorious white moon that slipped in and out of the trees.  After thawing frozen fingers and sitting by the fire I gazed out at the little tree and felt a spark of joy enter me. I remember imagining this little balsam being lit to celebrate all living trees…

What happened? Whenever I am trying to untangle a mystery, I turn to words. The poem that emerged helped me remember who I am—a person who feels deeply—a person who finds herself living in a culture that is beyond her comprehension—a person who understands that it is up to me to create meaning despite what is happening , meaning that includes myself and extends to the rest of nature.

I celebrate the Great Round, and my ceremonies mark these transitions, but this year I have been too depressed to engage. When this happens, I pray a lot to the trees as I walk expressing my hopelessness and begging for reprieve. Two months of silence.

When I lit that tree a spark flew through the window—a mystical bird reconnecting me on a feeling level to what this tree lighting means to me.

 I am celebrating the Tree of Life as she manifests as an evergreen, and by extension my return to the roots that have sustained me throughout my life. This morning I wept as I peered out the window onto monochromatic grays, and a half frozen brook, trees burdened by heavy snow (once considered too early in the season) by extending my love to all trees. Relief was palpable. That’s when I understood that my simple gesture of planting and tending to one small balsam for five years and then lighting her helped restore my broken relationship to all trees.

To be in touch with any feeling besides rage and hopelessness is to experience profound relief.

Now perhaps I can light my indoor Norfolk pine, create my solstice wreath, celebrate the solstice fire, give thanks, and enter Winter Light.

(Meet Mago Contributor) Sara Wright – Return to Mago E*Magazine


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