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locket

Fingers uncurled
and palm outstretched;

Brow furled
and lips upturned;

An oblong, crested, silver pendant
rests in the valleys I have created;

Tarnished, now half-silver plated, beaded
chain half-dangles below—

A gift from my mother,
and from her mother before,
and from her mother before,
and from her mother before.

Fingers curl one by one
following the familiar vintage ridges,
relearning what is already known to each.

Each then retrace its steps—
the earth calls to my locket, as she has done before;
this time, it answers—becoming one with the dust that created it.

My daughter’s palm is empty;
She will not carry it, as I have.

tree

I liken myself to a tree,
not one sitting on a shelf anxiously waiting to be chosen,
delicately removed, and planted in a cul-de-sac.
rather, one that sprouted serendipitously;
slowly swimming upward toward sunlight
until it reached the canopy of the likeminded;
towering over trodden trails
and the undiscovered;
collecting whispers of those who pass by;
whispering, whistling wind grazes me.
I shake and shudder,
in sync with all the trees around me, but
I grow unnoticed in a sea of those doing the same—
unattached; unabraded; unobserved.
if I fall,
and no one is there to hear my screams,
do I even make a sound?