I guess it’s in me somewhere,
hovering, waiting,
perhaps between heartbeats,
or underneath my breath,
hiding where it can’t be seen,
wanting to escape to somewhere,
perhaps over the rainbow
where bluebirds fly—
who knows why it’s there,
what it wants,
what it’s doing
when I’m sleeping?
Sometimes I wonder if it’s really there,
or just a notion I’m supposed to believe
like Santa Claus.
Sometimes I want it to speak to me,
tell me what I need to know,
to say, you’re not alone,
that it’s guiding me with whispers
in my ear when I close my eyes
and don’t know where to go.
And now that I am older,
my legs a little stiff,
my hair white and thin,
I wonder what it’s thinking,
if anything—
and when I kneel in the garden,
planting seeds
or pulling weeds,
does it grin, or snicker
when I try to stand,
or does it feel my lament,
my longing to be strong again.
And I wonder if I’ll ever know for sure
when I’m withering away,
wondering how I got here
and where I’m going,
and if, at last, on that final day,
I’ll see it smile and nod
and take me home.