A poem about missing someone you love, and some of the things you didn't do. |
Winter's Green 1. I want to quit thinking about what I had when I found you, and what we were together. Even more, all the things we didn’t get to see. Mountains that are more than hills, walking beaches where man first flew, the moments just before we would join sea and sun in morning’s first kiss, during our first Atlantic sunrise together. We shared both castles and cabins, we saw rain and sky, black bears huddled in fake rock cages, and fake leopards hugging rocky thighs. We smiled at one and quietly laughed at the other. Together. 2. I didn’t get to see the cool green of my ocean blend into the warm green of your eyes, we didn’t have the music of the beach or a summer moon under which to dance. People would have fun watching us teach each other our favorite dance, we would probably laugh at the way they smiled. What we knew was the cool of late winter, and yet somehow you could see not just potential but beauty in what was there. All of which made you even more beautiful as I caught a small glimpse inside of you, and smiled. I can’t help but want more sometimes- I can see us standing beneath Hatteras' stripes with dawn reflecting in your eyes, as I await the sun's rise from the water to slowly lift my lips from yours, hoping Triolina saw us and smiled. 3. The colors of life are carried in my dreams, and are dominated by shades of green - of growth? Or maybe they represent my unwillingness to give up hope. Green would be a hard color to never see again. I still have a star beside my bed - at night it shares its glowing green and memories of you. Maybe, someday you will return to see how it dimly offers up soft hope. Sometimes green looks almost black - like when the sun goes down and trees begin to blend day into night - until only blackness and, the wait for a new day remain. The sameness of each day without you strips the green from the next, as every tomorrow is a darker shade of today, and in every shadow cast is seen less hope. |