2/22/2026 (c)
“What speaks to us, seemingly, is always the
big event, the untoward, the extra-ordinary: the front-page splash, the banner
headlines.” Stephen Harrod Buhner
I aim to look at the small. The ordinary.
The moments I interact with a bird on the sidewalk—
hello Robin,
hello Crow,
a chickadee that would fit in one hand—
if it would trust me, and better that it doesn’t—
or to watch my cat eat, a beast tamed
with bowls and catnip;
who stalks me room to room
and sleeps on my keyboard
while I try to type—
the sudden surprise of scent
passing by an Aphrodite Sweet shrub,
or Lilac, Honeysuckle—
hello Perfume
I choose to walk by them on my way to work
rather than the more efficient concrete
sidewalk a block over—
Moments I don’t tell anyone about.
They are not big enough—
I miss and see less often slugs and worms
that rise and writhe across the sidewalk—
I read that they are trying to escape drowning,
but stranded, they starve.
Perhaps my longing to see them is misplaced,
how rare to see the underworld
expose itself to the sun—
I always feel like I can smell them—
it’s petrichor—
rain on dry soil, geosmin spores, earthy aerosols—
I want to carry all these intimacies,
like suggestions, like small moments within dreams
blurring into the day. I want to wear them
like a film over my skin—
Last month I saw the crocus in a neighbor’s yard.
Frequently they arrive in late February,
just before the final frost. But this was January,
And somehow I felt grateful for their hope.
