Phantom Wings

Screen Shot 2016-04-24 at 9.55.46 AMEvery once in a while

when you pull out

headphones from your ears

look past your screen

you see the person you love

playing in a nearby field with a thousand smiling planets

all in flower.

Even Kepler never dreamed of this.

Today, I saw a flailing angel stop his decent

despite the phantom pain where his wings used to be

with his hand rescue an earthworm from the asphalt

toss it on fresh dirt. He’ll be okay.

Earthday 2016

Happy Earthday!

Here are some of the amazing animals and wild places I’m grateful to have experienced and I’m grateful are out there.

It’s important to take a close look at what we’re doing or not doing, and how biodiversity enables us to lead very rich, wonderful lives.

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I would put a picture of my friends and family here too if they were okay with that, since human beings are animals too.

And music is cross-species. Whales and indri indri and crickets sing. So do human beings. They striate too, and pluck at strings.

 

Walking Across America

Recently, I had the pleasure of meeting a man named Andrew Forsthoefel. There was something about the way he listened and engaged with people that I instantly liked and made me curious about him. He had this way of drawing out of me and others around him the important parts, the parts we don’t often speak of with people we’ve just met. When I heard his story, I realized that he’d had lots of training.

One big important part for Andrew was what he learned while walking across the United States, from the east coast to the west coast. He wore out several pairs of shoes — five? six pairs? And he wore a sign that said, “Walking to listen.” He recorded conversations he had with people along the way.

When I listened to the part where he sees a bunch of young men ahead of him on the tracks, and he strides forward to talk with them, despite feeling a pang of apprehension, I couldn’t help but think of a similar experience described by John Muir, more than a hundred years before.

The part where he gets giddy with the freedom of the open road before him and starts singing is wonderful.

And the stories and advice and songs and gifts of the people he meets are also wonderful. And how he shares what he’s learned without hitting you over the head with it, because he’s still in the daily process of figuring it out, forgetting, remembering those moments of grace and beauty that he witnessed, was, and is part of.

I highly recommend the radio piece, “Walking Across America: Advice for a Young Man,” about his walk across America.