
It’s just dirt.
Just regular old Arkansas
Dirt.
But on rare visits home
I am drawn to this particular
Patch like a fish to
Water.
Their names are there,
My Mom and my Dad.
Though they are not,
I go anyway
And against all logic
I speak to them there.
Sometimes I feel like a
Little boy,
Frightened
By a nightmare, seeking comfort
At their bedside in the dark.
Other times, I am a teenager
Checking in after cruising
West Kingshighway, an evening
Spent looking for love despite
Already being loved
Deeply.
Today, I am fifty-five years old
But am channeling the teenager
Checking in.
I say,
“I’m doing good.
We are good.
And happy.”
I even employ facial expressions
To be more convincing
And don’t even feel silly.
I tell them where we live now.
I tell them about their
Granddaughters.
It is a one-sided conversation but
I sense their smiles,
And then mine.
I don’t stay long.
I never do.
I know they aren’t there,
And that it’s just Arkansas
Dirt.
But to me it is the most fertile
Soil,
And my heart grows stronger
And fuller
Every time that I go.

Good to see you back. Hope you had a blessed, white Christmas.
I also have my own little piece of Arkansas dirt that I visit occasionally. Going back to the 1840s, five generations of my people are there & I often wonder what they think of me here with all this magical stuff in the 21st century.
God is good. Let’s hope that 2026 is kind to us all.
Psalms 100:5
LikeLike