The Way Forward
The way forward droops, fatigued, from too much searching for it; a sleep-walking herd that scorns the drover’s lash. If angels fear to tread the weedy paths of what may be, then what chance have we, an erring child tribe that wanders stumbling, wildered, and sad through a desert of our own design, of sand grains we have polished and put back under foot, a worry-beaded landscape of grief. We cry ourselves awake each morn and groan our shattered souls to sleep. Anxiety is become our consort, the thing we love the most because without it we are lost. It’s the fruit of too much scrying into magic mirrors of a deep-hated past: our bleared eyes and misrecollecting minds crack and rive the brittle glass they feed upon. Guilt-saddled wretches, cold-trembling in the copper sun, we have glimpsed mirages of our former selves and are ashamed. But a half-considered sin is not a sin, and an uncommitted crime is not a crime, no matter how forcefully the unjust and obscurely doctrinaire rabble may counter with their au contraires. And if we are to find a way forward, it will be by the sly bending of muffled steps away from the numb paralytics and gibbering sprites that would stop at nothing to stop us all—a retrogressing mob. Striving to find hope is already to have found it. And in finding hope, the way forward stands revealed in the honeyed dawn, new, untrammeled, unclouded, unconcealed.
You’re an amazing poet. Have you ever considered writing a collection? These are such beautiful collisions of the problems of the modern world and the wisdom of the past.
❤️