Laying Down Roots

By Makis
- 26 reads
Before I learned of the weight of existence
I knew the familiar creak of the back gate
swinging against our allotted time, watching
the to and fro of our simple rhythms.
I knew the smell of engineers' oil on my father's
overall as he slumped from his work into a kitchen
chair, and the way my mother hummed with the
kettle, as if quietly celebrating his return.
Our house was small and giving, allowing its voices
to reach my room, its warm, filtered assurances drifting
through the walls and resting gently on my chest,
slowly forming the bedrock on which I would stand.
Outside, on hot Summer days, we sowed ourselves
into the fertile soil with searching fingers and
carried it home under our broken nails and bloodied
knees, in search of a mother's reassurance.
We climbed the trees and perched on kerbs, tossing
snobs into the air on lazy afternoons, and all the while
becoming part of the very earth that we revelled in,
cloaked in dusty innocence and oblivious of danger.
It happened oh so slowly, with bruised egos and tears,
being carried home through watercolour weather as the
world laid more and more of its indelible marks on us,
binding us unmistakably to that time and place.
Sometimes I return to the street that grew me and it
seems so much smaller, but I realise it's not the street
that's changed, but me, I have grown taller because my
roots reached deep down into that nourishing fertile soil.
And way beneath the man I became, behind the face
that weathered the storms and the voice that shouted
into them, lies the boy whose roots were firmly anchored
to that constant place, a place of love and belonging.
Audio file: https://1drv.ms/f/c/4db44a4d6b88c854/IgC1s5JzXLJHT5hoD4ND5uvuAW8Lg_HfvZX...
Image by Freepik
- Log in to post comments


