Musing, February 13, 2025

Beating Heart Image
School of the World   By Maureen Ash 
Late evening the car hits ice on
a curve, slides toward the chasm but
there’s gravel, the tires grab,
you breathe, drive home, carry
groceries in under the moon’s thin
silver feather, sweet winter cold  fresh as water on your face. 

You have been a disappointment, you
failed, left an essential task undone, caused harm, 
it is too late, you can’t—won’t—can never—and then
you awaken, this gray light is dawn, it
was a dream, just a dream, you
rise from twisted sheets breathing 
hard with the new day ahead, such a gift you
could take it in your arms and kiss
its delicate edges. 

And in spring the tree that
looked dead furs itself in blossoms, your
lost cat returns, the bug on your
rosebush is harmless, even pretty. 

Relief after dread, joy after sadness.  Not
always but sometimes, enough
that hope’s faint starlight draws
your gaze and you see in a crowd the face

that is like a new leaf, like a scent of roses
in winter, like a child’s fever lifting.

Here, schooled by luck, beauty,
and love in this world you now find
a heart beating as if
it had been taught
exactly the rhythm of yours.
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