The Living Trunk
A Meditation Upon What Holds and What Releases

The soil remembers
every seed that fell
before my coming,
each root winding
through darkness
seeking water.
π±
My ancestors are minerals
now dissolved in loam;
their voices have become
the language trees speak
when wind moves through them,
asking where we go.
π±
Below the world of light
my roots drink sorrow.
They taste the salt
of every tear
the ground has swallowed.
Yet from this brine
they draw their strength to climb.
π±
For grief ferments
to something sweeter
given time.
The dead feed life,
and life feeds
what will bloom.
π±
Above, my branches reach
for what they cannot see,
some vast, impossible becoming.
My leaves turn toward a sun
they will never hold.
They want, they want, they want,
and wanting grows them.
π±
Each spring I split my bark
with green ambition.
Between these two directions
lives the trunk,
the present tense
where past and future marry.
π±
Here is where I learn
to bear the burden
of all I have lost
and all I may become.
The rings inside me
tell of drought and plenty.
π±
What grounds me
is what pulls me from the ground.
What holds me still
propels me toward the sky.
π±
I am the meeting place
of earth and air,
the living proof
that staying means to change,
that roots grow deeper
only so branches fly.
About the Creator
Tim Carmichael
Iβm a firm believer life is messy, beautiful, and too short, which is why I write poems full of heart and humor. I am an Appalachian poet and cookbook author. My book Beautiful and Brutal Things is on Amazon, Link π


Comments (3)
So many profound lessons here! loved it
Love this. Especially the contradictions you showed towards the end. I think the stand out line was about the lines showing drought and plenty. Very cool imagery, and a powerful way to illustrate the lingering effects of personal history. Great poetry!
A poem full of green life, without becoming sappy. I loved this.