As April snow swirls
some of us fall — again
not from high up in the sky
but far down into earth
into unseen places of
unseasonable depression
of spirits and bodies —
wildly overdue for light
waiting for new breaths
of fresher, kinder airs
the ones that soothe us,
reassure our bones.
At moments like this,
it feels there is no
beginning, middle, or
end to our woes —
neighbors hibernate,
walk on brittle ice
as we are buried in
winter hats and coats.
Vermont seasons demand
we embody dispassion
yet we long for one more
warm body beside us
each and every
darkest night
till all is light.
. . . . .
spb | six