The pain in the rain
By Virginia Jasmin Pasalo
IT rains again, and I am calm. I have accepted you are gone. A thing I remember when it rains. I remember your eyes, your soft eyes against the backdrop of pine needles in whose tips tiny round balls of rain gather before they drop to the ground. Very thin, sharp, delicate shreds of leaves shed on the forest floor that often fall under strong winds, which you always gather to start a bonfire, after they have dried in the sun.
In the morning, we would walk among pine trees, gathering the cones in a pasiking (knapbasket), and arrange them on top of the mantel above the fireplace. We marvel at the beauty of the pods, their capacity to contain life and renew the forest, as the flames slowly heat the room, and we embrace, in silence.
I close my eyes and see you in the rain. Perhaps that is why lovers close their eyes when they kiss. They see more, they see the invisible. The rain falls very slowly, in a cadence that calms excruciating pain, departing as slowly as it came, but with the gift of acceptance, the appreciation and valuing of memories.
I die a little all the time. I live a little all the time. In the rain, I am washed away, like pine needles snatched by the heavy wind, to be gathered to start a fire.
Sacrifice
there are days when I no longer think of you
when the urgency of daily living takes precedence
over the yearnings of my heart
when the call is to rise above the rubble
that mightier hands had excavated for their gain
I see myself in the rising with other seeds
born from the tears and sweat of those who toil
daily, without fail, to live
in the rising, you have become my breath
you are not the sacrifice
but the sun, the soil and the rain
Rainfall
the wound had healed
but the pain is there
sharp as the edge of the knife
piercing on soft flesh,
fresh as the raindrop
beating heavily
digging through the ground
of a buried memory
Share your Comments or Reactions
Powered by Facebook Comments