Thursday, March 26, 2026

Meta 

The feel of a much needed hug in a moment of sorrow
An unexpected helping hand from the stranger
The curl of the tiniest of fingers wrapped trustingly around your own
A gentle breeze on the cusp of Autumn
And the way a leaf  flies against it
The acrid scent of dying sugar maple
Hurried against an ombre October sunset
How the moon fills the sky
And lights a child’s face when she sees it
The way giggles sound sweeter when hurled against the din
Of a tide rising at their feet
The curious curl of a mustached lip smiling across the Metro
The extended hand on the crowded, too fast jitney
The arms carrying the wounded
And the hearts carrying their prayers
The church bell in the distance
And the train whistle calling memory home
All the tender places we land
In our journeys
Glances that smile
Whispers that remind you
Touches that feather sweetness
Compassion and care

These moments
When life unfurls sorrows
Yields weariness
Beckons the best of us
Burrows to the core
Sways in endless fields of  blossoms
You are the wind, the leaf, the tree
You are the raging ocean inviting giggles
You are the blessed setting sun
Ablaze in fiery colors
You are the hum of  home and the traveler
You are the dying and the giver of  Life
You are the sun and the moon and the stars
You are the promise that moves mountains
You are all that is good and loving and kind
You are Life and Life Everlasting
I AM You and You are Me
We are one unto each other
We are the Thing unto Itself

Rev. Robin G. Wright

Knucklehead Learns a New Word

I'm sorry it wasn't till the end of the year
that I asked you to write about yourselves.
 
You filled pages in May and June, my arm
and wrist were sore from writing
wow and oh my goodness in the margins
 
as you shared stories from your lives,
about the times you fell in love
or lost somebody or learned to ride a bike.
 
And so many of you wrote about your mothers
as so many of the boys and girls I've taught since
have written about their mothers.
 
To my mother, for my mother. I've read these words
over and over for fifteen years and still
they move me. And that year, my first
 
time craning my neck to read them, I didn't
understand how holy it was, what I was doing,
holier than the masses I attended
 
at the mission, than the confessions I made or the readings
I assigned you: Dante and the Bible and Huckleberry Finn.
I wasted so many words and days, bleeding
 
the clock down, forcing your silence. When you broke it,
Ay Maestro! You would say. Tell us something new.
Now I can't remember anything I said. I remember
 
it felt strange not to know what word would come
next. I remember thinking I did not like
letting go control.
 
And on the radios blasting as I walked home I heard
Pasame la botella and you singing along
 
Voy a beber en nombre de ella
and whizzing by me too on the bikes
 
you'd long since learned to ride.
Ay Maestro! Ay Dante! you'd call out,
 
A smile and a laugh at my nickname
but yes, even the snicker's a grace, I realize now.
 
I don't have the yearbook anymore from '05-'06
but I bet some of you do, some of you
 
were on student council, right?
Put us back in touch.
 
I want more than regret
for my first seven months as your teacher,
 
want more than the cliché—you gave me
more than I gave you—that's not enough
 
though it's certainly true. There's another,
maybe better: Words can travel a thousand miles.
 
And what I'm thinking about now
is the 5 or 10 or 20
 
your mothers traveled for our first
parent teacher conferences. How nervous
 
I was, and did not know yet
how much you loved them.
 
For the Spanish speaking I knew enough
to say es un privilegio a enseñar
 
a su hijo. It is a privilege
to teach your son.
 
Even then, slow as I was to see
how holy it all was,
 
I saw that. Privilegio. I say it still
in Spanish that hasn't got much better,
 
to parents of boys and girls
who speak that tongue. Es un privilegio.
 
Privilegio. PRIV - IL - LAY - HEE - OH.
the word lighter in Spanish than English,
 
floating through tongue and teeth.
I learned it, among many other things,
 
my first year, with you.

Zach Czaia