Descendants / Ancestors
Kenneglen
What will they be like?
I fear the decisions we make today
Will lead to a rougher life
Than necessary
For them.
But then I see the grasses
The pink flowers swaying in the warm summer breeze
And I can imagine them looking
At their own grasses
Their own pink flowers
With the same patience,
Love,
And peace
That I feel.
The birdsong and the tall trees
I hope these do not fade away
Due to the poisonous choices
We make today.
The reeds, the leaves,
The stones by the creek,
These will last.
They may change, but they will last.
For if they don’t,
Is life worth living without them?
I seek these refuges,
And it is my responsibility to create and steward more
For them.
A thousand years in the future,
Along a creek.
The possibility of a crisscrossing network
Of vehicles
Cover the sky.
But not in this timeline.
Instead,
There are trees and stewarded creeks.
Along such a creek,
I sit and wonder:
What were they like?
What changed?
We’re told of the old ways
And the old, old ways.
So much of their choices
Were leading us all to ruin.
Was it the sweet taste of a berry
That made them change course?
Was it the sound of a bird in the distance?
Or the slight summer breeze
Slowly moving alongside a nearly-dry creek bed
Causing pink flowers and grasses to sway?
For thousands of years,
We’ve traveled down to this spot
To this creek
And marveled at the little things.
Even while the world outside
Threatened to eat it all up,
They decided to let it be.
Is that not the greatest gift to give?
To just let something be and enjoy its life and spirit,
Like a warm, fleeting zephyr.