Coming and Going

                                                                                        –  a poem by Alexandra Hepburn

 

Have you ever marveled

as I have, so often,

at the ceaselessness of change?

Nothing seems to stand still –

Moon fades, Sun appears, then sets –

clouds, or rain, drought or snow or wind –

nothing is forever.

 

Our children grow like trees –

if life is kind.

If we are patient learners, we may discover ways

to nurture and protect,

so they can become themselves

and flourish.

No guarantee.

 

Everywhere you look,

change seems in motion –

sometimes for better, sometimes not –

cars, phones, how we make money,

who we love or leave,

how we sleep or dream,

how we age.

 

One day, if time is kind,

we wake up to discover –

to our genuine surprise –

we are not just “aging” –

we have passed through

an unexpected gateway –

we have “grown old.”

 

How shall we meet this revelation?

As a terrifying harbinger

of death?

As an unrelenting list

of things to do

(now, not later, no longer someday)?

 

Might we perhaps, instead,

feel flooded with

unanticipated waves

of thanksgiving

for what we have seen and felt and been given,

and hopefully given to others,

known and unknown?

 

And oh, might we feel

a surprising curiosity,

a wave of wonder

about the journey yet to come –

What Mystery awaits?

 

Photo by İbrahim Hakkı Uçman: https://www.pexels.com/photo/four-leaves-on-wooden-board-691067/