Tell me, does the robin understand
what she is singing about at dawn,
that whole gorgeous insistence of song
rising before the sun has fully committed
to its own return?
🌸
Something has shifted.
You can feel it
moving through the open meadow,
that slow and tender loosening,
as if the earth itself
has exhaled after a long, difficult holding.
🌸
Yesterday there was only shadow.
Today, a crocus. Just one
violet and astonishing,
pushing its bright head up
through cold, reluctant soil,
as if to say I was always here.
I was only waiting.
🌸
And isn't that the whole lesson?
That life does not abandon us,
it simply rests.
That beneath every hard season
something warm and stubborn
keeps its own faithful calendar.
🌸
I walked out this morning,
and the light had changed
softer now, and longer,
full of that burnished gold
that only belongs to March.
🌸
A bee, the first bee, stumbled
through the new warmth
like a creature remembering
what it was made for.
🌸
I stood there.
I let the sun find my face.
🌸
Oh, to be so willing
to simply open,
to rise when called,
to believe, again and again,
that this
all of this
is worth waking for.
About the Creator
Tim Carmichael
I am an Appalachian poet and cookbook author. I write about rural life, family, and the places I grew up around. My poetry and essays have appeared in Beautiful and Brutal Things, My latest book. Check it out on Amazon


Comments (2)
Beautiful…a reason to be grateful. Lovely poem.
This was lovely to read. Nicely done!