The Grace From a Child’s Eyes

I know kids, and I’m not enamored of them like some adults claim they are. Kids are loud, obnoxious and selfish, as the kid persona dictates they be. I don’t like that part, and you don’t have to either. However, respecting the human being inside the kid is an entirely different matter. That, you need to do and it’s easy — there is something innately beautiful behind a child’s eyes, and I’m a sucker for it every time. They always know it, too. It’s like they got some kind of strange radar zeroing in on me. It’s a good spooky.  Like the time at the mini-mall.

My brother and sister-in-law and I were there to browse and visit the boutiques. They wanted to go into a store that didn’t interest me, so I parked myself down on a bench in the walkway to wait for them. The bench sat parallel to the stores, so I could easily keep an eye on their whereabouts and hook up with them again when they were finished.

I had been feeling particularly frazzled and distracted the last few days. My job was a high-profile one in government, and the demands on my time had begun taking their toll. On call twenty-four hours a day, I had found myself with little time to sit and think, or to reflect upon my surroundings. Although I had been looking forward to my family’s visit and was enjoying our time together, my mind was still back at the office, whirling with tasks left undone from last week and tasks coming up that were critical to the office. I couldn’t wait to get back there and tend to my duties.

With my thoughts meandering into the best way to approach my latest project, I put my mind back onto the details of my work. But without warning, I suddenly turned my head swiftly to the right. Startled, all I saw down the walkway was a young couple with a baby in a stroller.

The man and woman were just another couple, and the kid was just another kid. Getting too many of them in the world, I would be quick to tell you. (Remember, I’m not fond of the kid part of kids.)  But I looked at the baby in the stroller as if I really had to see.

The kid was a boy, and looked about a year old. Sitting straight up and looking ahead, not wiggling in his seat, or fussing. Just calm and composed, as if he were floating, instead of being pushed. His face and his eyes locked into mine.

That’s what the human beings inside kids do.They crawl behind your eyeballs to see who you really are. After a few seconds, the kids are usually satisfied and look away. Most of the time, they smile before they do.  But not this little fella, no siree.

He stayed locked into my eyes, all the while getting pushed closer and closer to me. I think, “This is peculiar!” but I get into it and so I just sat still and let him look.

The stroller was now passing in front of me. The parents were unaware that he and I were looking deeply at each other, and so I smile, to tell him I see him. He does not return my smile. Even when he was pushed past me. While the stroller moved further down the pathway and away from the bench, the little boy bent over the side of the stroller, still drawing me into his eyes, still watching me. I expected him to be forced to turn away. But does he?  Nuh uh.  He just keeps his head towards me with eyes locked in, still staring while moving away.

Usually, I look away right about now. A person like myself has other things to do than stare back at a small child. There are great thoughts to think, errands to run, and all the other things busy adults take care of in their lives.

Not this time.

This time, there was something that was different. I didn’t want to look away. I would not have turned away for anything. It was this small boy himself. I wasn’t simply staring into a small child’s eyes. I was drawn in, like a bee to honey. Only the sensation wasn’t sticky…it was cool and soothing. Calming. I bent my head down to make it easier on the small boy to look into my eyes. There we were, two heads bowed down and turned towards each other, he and I, oblivious to everything and everybody else.

With this intense staring, the tense muscles in my neck and shoulders started to unclench and relax. Small sounds of laughter in the background somewhere tickled my brain and I felt good inside.Tidbits of animated, excited conversations crawled onto the edge of my consciousness and I was glad that good people still existed and in some places, all was right with the world.

The image of the stack of papers on my desk at work suddenly seemed to have shrunk to a manageable size, and faded out of my mind. Thoughts of a special dinner I could prepare for my family tonight to show how much I was enjoying their visit danced through my head.

Slowly, the small boy unlocked his gaze from me, lifted his head and and turned away. Once again, he was sitting straight up, gazing straight ahead, but this time, away from me.

I lifted my head up too then, quite aware that something extraordinary had just happened to me, but not being able to say what it was, exactly. But my body felt it fully.      A well-being shiver floated through me from the top of my mind to the tip of my toes, all in one flat second. I had never felt so beautiful or peaceful in my whole life, as I had at that moment.

My brother and sister-in-law came out of the store and I got up from the bench to join them. They were excited about showing me their purchases, and I was excited to let them. All thoughts of my job had been set aside. Instead, I was noticing the great smile my brother had, and the sparkle in my sister-in-law’s eyes. I knew what I was going to fix for dinner, and that I would take the time to tell them how much both of them meant to me.

I didn’t tell them about the boy. It seemed too special to share. When that small boy looked at my face and he didn’t want to leave my eyes, he gifted me with grace that touched my soul. His child’s innocence and complete trust in life had seemed to instinctively know that I needed to be redirected. That moment slid into my brain and hugged my frazzled thoughts and focused them towards things that truly matter in life: people, and time to spend with them.

As we left the store, I turned to look at the disappearing stroller and smiled.

Kids. They sure can surprise you, especially when you’re lookin’.

 

On a corner on my sidewalk, my soul whispered.


The November morning is damp and gray. Soaked leaves coat the sidewalk and cling to the street. The houses seem still. No one is about. It is just barely past a gray dawn, and I am walking. Yard light sensors go on as I walk by. I am being rained on. If I am going to be serious about being fit, I better be serious and just do it. I am furious.

My pace is brisk. I see 2 pairs of ducks floating on the retention pond as I pass by. Early birds chatter in the trees. A train whistles in the distance. I am furious.

White supremacy has politically raped we women. Again. And this is both from white men, and tragically, white women. The nightmare will soon commence. I am furious.

As I turn a corner on the sidewalk, my soul whispers to me. “We got this. We are working on correcting this.” Then you damn well better speed it up, I whisper back. I am furious.

My soul is not silenced. It is gentle. “In the most horrific of Bad, there is still good. In the Good, there is no bad. Good is more powerful than Bad. Find the Good. Embrace it. Harvest it. 20 seconds is all it takes.” I walk. My rain suit crinkles in the quiet with each step. I am focused.

I hear the train whistle and for 20 seconds, I hear and feel the serenity in it. The birds chatter and for 20 seconds, I hear the songs of purpose. I pass the 2 pairs of ducks on the pond, and for 20 seconds, I admire their calm, their grace. I am thoughtful. We women and our evolved men fought for the good and dignity of humanity, for truth and integrity, and came together.

My good friends and good women and evolved men everywhere
…we are not done. Self care. Heal. Your soul will whisper to you. Embrace each Good and harvest it for 20 seconds. When we embrace even the smallest speck of Good, it will seek out other Good and connect deeper. My soul whispers to me again. “You can create your own Good, too.”

You are good people. In your intense pain you are still kind, still focused, still compassionate. Be strong. Do not give the rapists an inch. But don’t hesitate to plant your Good on fertile ground. It will be embraced. It will grow the way to truth, integrity, and the power to correct this nightmare.

I walked up my street on my way to my home, my rain suit dripping from the warm drizzle. A dog barked. A woman walked to her car. People were waking up.

We will make sure they all do. And so it beings…with us. With Good. We WILL bring our country through this wall and out the other side, intact. How? I don’t know yet. I’m still in self care mode. But I do know this: our souls will whisper to us the how, the when, the where. We are not alone.

Go in peace and Good, my friends. ‘Til we meet again.

A Tribute to my Brother on the First Anniversary of his Death

He was a proud veteran; a devoted husband; a loving family patriarch; a kind neighbor, a loyal friend. And to everyone, in any role, on every occasion, Wayne Konrardy was a good man. 

When we lost him unexpectedly and tragically on January 10, 2023, we, from all generations and diverse families, from all walks of life, states and countries, gathered together to honor him, to pay tribute to him, to show our collective love for him.  The more than 500 people who gathered that afternoon…who waited an hour and a half to pay their respects and didn’t care it took that long…each of them had a story of him to tell.  I listened to everyone. Every story was “so Wayne”. But my story is different.  I grew up with Wayne.  He was my brother, my protector, my birth family.

When asked to tell what my brother Wayne was like, I always described him as somebody who, within 5 minutes of talking to him, you would already be feeling like you’d known him for years.  He made lifelong friends in instants. As his wife, Mary, can attest to, even new geography couldn’t stop him from finding people he liked, and making new friends. Some of you reading this, are one of those who met him on your vacation, and became lifelong friends. Only, lifelong was supposed to be longer.

In his long career of selling cars, he believed that integrity mattered, and relationships with people were the priority.  That’s probably why so many of who bought cars from Wayne, still reached out to him when he retired, for help purchasing a new one.  You could trust him. 

Wayne didn’t always like the new people he met.  But his opinion came second to his kindness, and respect for each person’s right to be treated with dignity.  Sometimes, he wasn’t too keen with people who weren’t even born yet.  He liked to tell people that when our mom and dad left for the hospital to have me, he was full of excited anticipation.  For they had told him that they’d return home with a wonderful surprise, just for him.  He was convinced he was finally getting his biggest wish.  When Mom walked in a week later with me and proudly introduced a baby sister to him, he exclaimed in horror, “I thought you were getting me a pony!” and walked away, crying.  Our parents dismissed it, knowing that once he got to know me, he’d love me.  But it would take a while.  He slipped me in his wagon one day when mom was occupied with doing the laundry, and quickly took me to our elderly neighbors who had no babies of their own, and tried to sell me.  Once or twice in the next few years, especially when I became a pest following him around, I would hear him mutter, “shoulda been a pony.” 

Wayne’s gift of salesmanship may have failed with the elderly neighbors, but it worked with me. All I knew of my big brother, was that he wouldn’t let anyone else speak ill of me, hurt me, or ignore me. I loved my big brother.

As we grew up and began to earn money with odd jobs, it was obvious that I was more “careful” with my coins than Wayne was with his.  Which translated, meant that I was tight and Wayne was generous.  Even as a young boy, any money he had he would share with his friends. For  a day or so after any pay day, Wayne was the grand host. But before the week was out, he was putting on a smile and trying to talk me into buying something of his so he would have the money to treat himself and his friends at the corner store.  I held on to my money.  Until one day he got his hands on a small teddy bear. He offered the cute furry thing to me for the bargain price of a soda and chips. I caved and paid him. 

When Wayne became short of money again, he recalled he had had a winner with the teddy bear, except there was a slight problem – he only had the one he had sold me.  He solved the problem by sneaking into my room when I was playing outside, grabbing it, and presenting it to me as a new one, for the same great deal of a soda and chips. I bought “that one”, too. 

It became a running joke with Wayne that he kept selling me the same teddy bear over and over for about 3 years, and I never knew it.  The truth that I can now share with you is this: I always knew it was the same teddy bear.  I kept “buying” it because it was the only way I could give Wayne my money without his knowing it was only because I liked him.  I had my pride, ya know.

 Wayne was graceful and sure on his feet as he grew up.  He loved to dance, to roller skate – to move.  He was in sports and a skilled baseball pitcher and batter in high school.

He was not an arrogant man, but as he aged, he found no problem mentioning his ping pong skills.  It was true that he was an undeclared champ…taking his honed skills on the road, on his travels, whenever a resort provided a ping pong table.  He told me the story once of being at a beach on vacation and watching a couple playing ping pong.  He said he casually sauntered over and inquired into the game, and struck up a conversation.  Sure enough, he was asked if he wanted to join them and was offered a paddle.  He coyly hesitated a bit, then smiled at them and to their shock, promptly kicked their butts for the next 3 games.  He laughed for months afterwards, telling the story, knowing he “still had it.” 

My brother loved music.  Back in the day, that meant the kitchen radio at night and station KAAY out of Little Rock Arkansas.  It would sometimes take Wayne a full five minutes to get it tuned in, but then we’d listen for as long as Mom would let us stay up.  Together, he and I became part of an historic event one bright, summer Saturday, because of music. 

I was in the living room when Wayne, in the kitchen, came rushing to me, grabbing my arm, saying excitedly as he pulled me into the kitchen, “You’ve got to listen to this group!”  I stood next to him, ears cocked to the radio.  Out blasted the best song I had ever heard.  We stood there together, rapt, tapping our feet and hands, mesmerized by the rhythm, the beat…it was unlike anything we had ever heard before, and we were loving it.  When the song stopped I asked Wayne who the heck was singing that great song!?!  He said he heard the band was odd looking with really long hair and from England.  Moptops, he said they were. 

He promised he would go to K-Mart that week to see if the record was in stock.  It was, and that’s how we became one of the millions who owned the single, “I want to hold your hand.”  I still brag that Wayne and I both knew from the very beginning, that the Beatles were the greatest musicians of all time.

My brother was a born charmer.  One of the most charismatic people you’d ever meet.  When he smiled at you…talked to you…he looked you in the eye and you felt like you were the only person in the room.  He became the best friend you ever had.  He was an easy person to talk to, confide in, and his laugh was contagious.  I had more girl friends than anybody else in school, because every girl in the building had a crush on him and wanted to follow me home, just to gaze upon him for a minute or two.

He stayed the kind of guy you always turned to if you needed advice, or help, or just wanted to enjoy the day talking and laughing.  He made you a better person just being around him.  He showed you the better side of yourself…and with it, the world seemed a gentler place.

Above all else in his life, the one person who mattered the most to Wayne, was his wife Mary.  The love between Wayne and Mary is the down-to-earth, uplifted, special, and profound love that we all hoped was in the world, but wasn’t sure it was, until them. 

With Mary, what gave him the greatest joys and pride in his life was his family.  He devoted his time to their two sons, John and Jim, their daughter-in-law, “the Kid” Dawn; their grandchildren and the loves in their lives, and the great grandchildren. But his love didn’t stop there. He extended his pride and love to all his family beyond his core one, to aunts, siblings, nieces, nephews, godchildren, cousins, and on and on.  

Cancer brings us to our knees.  It diminishes the quality of life of those we love, and takes them from us far earlier than life should.  Yes, cancer brings us to our knees, and it did Wayne. 

But he didn’t stay there. 

The word, “hero” is defined as a person who is admired or idealized for courage, outstanding achievements, or noble qualities.  There are war heroes, and heroes who save people from accidents or possible death.  But if ever they create a category for “hero of the spirit”, it would be my brother Wayne. 

He straightened up his body from the blows each time, and stared that evil cancer  in the face, full on.  He would not allow it to define his soul.  He faced the harsh treatments with gratitude that there were options.  He refused to be bitter and kept his kindness to all living creatures in spite of the injustice of his illness…he expanded his love for his beautiful wife, his family, friends, neighbors…to all of us.

Like all who knew him, I came to admire him even more during his illness, for his courage and tenacity, and how, instead of being bitter…whining…complaining…he smiled.  He joked.  He told his stories.  He was compassionate and loving.  He was a gentle man, strong in his belief that life was to be lived with gratitude, every minute, every day. 

We all miss Wayne.  We all miss the man he was.  But I also miss the little boy he was…the one who always woke me up at 3AM to run down and see what Santa got us…who went fishing in a rain puddle with me.  Who let me wear his cowboy hat.  The one who lent me his favorite baseball mitt for the neighborhood game…okay, I may have taken that mitt without asking him. 

We miss him in all the ways he was to us: the brother, the husband, the father, the grandfather, the relative, the friend, the neighbor.  We mourn the bright light that has gone out in our lives. 

I paraphrase Anne Morrow Lindberg.  The pain we feel is universal, and understood by everyone.  And yet, it is very isolating, for each pain is different, and we each are alone in bearing it.  But my brother Wayne, your Wayne…never knew a time when he couldn’t lift himself up, out and on his way again with a smile on his face.  So can one with such a beautiful soul, ever be gone from us?

 We won’t let it.  We were better people around him, and we will remain so. 

As long as we can show any courage in facing adversity…display acts of kindness towards meanness…inspire a bit of laughter in tension…we will be honoring him, and he will be right there with us when we do.  We will keep him in our lives, and we will make him proud. 

Let us, through our pain of grief, remember that Wayne’s heart was larger than life because he made and lived it so…and because of that, it was large enough for a piece of it to stay behind, and comfort us, for all the rest of our lives.

 So let us then honor Wayne as he would want us to.  Let us grieve, but also let us try, between our tears…to find a way to smile…if even just a little. 

We will speak of what Wayne has given us, and our lives.  We all mattered to him.  We were all appreciated by him. We all knew we were special…and loved…by him.  Because that’s what Wayne would do in the end.…take care of the rest of us. This, family…this, friends…this, neighbors…is his everlasting legacy, and his profound gift to each of us. 

Peace, my beloved brother, Wayne.  Tell Mom and Dad I said hi.

New Year’s Eve 2001: A New Year in New York

It doesn’t matter who you are.  September 11, 2001, will haunt you for the rest of your life.

I wanted to pay my respects not just to Ground Zero’s victims, but to New York.  Like a funeral service, you don’t know what to say, but you want to say something.  I had to go, and so ion December 30, 2001, I did.

I flew into New Jersey and took the train to New York.   I was walking through the station to the street exit when I passed a long wall that was a memorial to New York and the victims.  Posters from grade schools kids;  photos (“Last seen at World Trade Center.  If you have seen…please notify…”);  a flower or two;  poems;  letters;  hundreds of messages.   I put my hand up and touched them, and felt the pain behind the pleas.

I checked into the hotel, set my bags down and headed for Ground Zero.   The cab took me to within a few blocks but got stopped in bumper-to-bumper traffic.  After getting directions from the driver, I got out and walked the rest of the way.

Groups of people were walking towards the site and I slid in alongside them, into their purposeful, quiet rhythm.  Police officers were next to the curb, trying to keep warm with a barrel fire.

I paused when I saw red, white and blue wreaths adorning an overpass.  I paused when I saw a fire department door with a sign thanking New York for its support.  I paused when I saw red white and blue ribbons tied on an iron fence.  I paused when I saw flags on balconies, in windows, on buildings, on police cars and fire trucks.  It’s one thing to see flags displayed here in the Midwest, it’s another thing to see them in New York.

You know when Ground Zero is around the next corner.  All of Manhattan is closed in with buildings, tall, taller and tallest, until then.  Suddenly, you look ahead and see a wide space of sky and you know.  The openness is eerie.

I walked alongside the barricades that were used in the first weeks to block off the street, but are now moved aside.  You can hear the cranes and trucks before you see them, and slight wasps of smoke from debris still smoldering.  There’s a slightly unpleasant odor in the air.  Police vehicles are parked everywhere.

The site was barricaded off, with police directing pedestrians and authorized vehicles.  A corner of the barricade was covered in photos, flowers, notes, wreaths, candles, and stuffed animals.  There was even a Christmas tree.  The people moved in, paused, took pictures or prayed or cried or all three, and moved away.  I heard someone behind me say, “The photos are hard to take.”  The faces of real people, real losses.

A tall building opposite where I was standing was blackened and charred.  The building to the left of me had it’s corner blown out.  The building to the right had boards where windows once were.

There was an opening in the barricade that allowed you to see a portion of the site.  Daylight was beginning to disappear and huge lights were shining on the wreckage.  I could see a crane, digging.  I turned right and moved to the next block.

A crew of rescue workers were going in.  Trucks were lined up to leave the site.  Tall, massive showers were built to wash down the vehicles before they exited.  A flatbed piled high with debris drove past me.  Twisted, mangled debris that I had no idea were cars until I saw the tires.  Another truck passed me.  They were taking the debris to the landfill site, where searchers would sift through it for human remains.  There were trucks stopped down the block and lined up to the right, waiting.  As a truck would leave the site, another, empty one would start up and take its place.  The trucks never stopped leaving, never stopped arriving.  Over and over, lines of trucks, 24 x 7.

It had turned dark and cold.  I started heading back, choosing to walk on the same street where thousands had run for their lives that day.  My psyche went backwards in time.  I felt the fear that had blasted down the streets; heard the noise that overpowered the senses.  With each step I wondered who had gone before me.  I prayed for them and their families.

I wanted to touch something, to feel something beneath my fingertips, anything to get the message to my brain that this was true, that an evil so great existed on my homeland long enough to cause a century of pain and tears. Why, why, innocent victims?  Why, why, the evil madness?

The next day I struck out again.  One of Mayor Giuliani’s last accomplishments was the opening of a public platform that morning at Ground Zero, and I wanted to go back.  But first I needed to see something else.  I walked from mid-town Manhattan to Central Park.

I’ve been to New York before, I know the cold reserve and rudeness for which New Yorkers are famous.  But that’s not the New York that survived September 11.  There are those tourists with cameras and accents or a language different from the native-born New Yorker, who kept to the themselves;  and, there were the teenagers or young adults who were totally absorbed in looking cool, as we all were then, who kept to themselves.  But loads of others — doormen, clerks, waitresses, walkers, police officers, shoppers — whose kindnesses were profoundly evident.  A smile here, a nod there;  a “pardon me,” an “it’s that way” with a smile and wishes for a happy new year.  It was like being home in the Midwest.

I found the Dakota and went past the doorway where John Lennon was shot down, which sickened me.

I crossed the street to Central Park to the mosaic memorial in Strawberry Fields, which made me feel sad.  I sat for a while and watched others pay their respects or take photos.  Before I left, I took off a glove and touched the mosaic.  I thought of the Beatle years and smiled.  Nothing could kill that.  I thought of September 11 and wondered what had survived for us.

I strolled through Central Park where dogs chased rubber balls or children twirled and laughed with the pigeons;  where lovers walked, absorbed in themselves and the bright light of the winter sun in the afternoon.

How could so much evil exist in a world of such beauty?

I walked back through Times Square where the New Year’s ball was being tested and hoisted, engraved with the names of the fallen rescuers.  Massive amounts of people were crowding into the area, working their way around the police vans and trucks, amidst the security personnel checking the area.  Then I went back to Ground Zero.

By the time I arrived, darkness was falling and the wind was making the air incredibly bitter.  The line for the public platform was stretched for two to three blocks.  The crowd was being informed that the average wait was 3½ hours.

I strolled on the street instead, which was partially barricaded from the traffic.  City Hall was nearby on the left and the St. Paul Chapel and Cemetery was on my right.

The church shouldn’t have survived, but it did.  It’s the city’s oldest church, dating back to the inaugural of George Washington as president.  Despite all odds, it was still there for the rescue workers when they placed the body of their fallen chaplain on its altar.  The iron fence in front was covered in flowers, wreaths, signs, candles.  One sign stood out, asking that no photographs be taken of the rescue workers, out of respect for their privacy:  they visit the church during their breaks.

I reached the public platform and stopped.  Only a small group of people are sent up at a time, but each group is allowed a few minutes before the next one is sent up.  People didn’t talk when they came down.

I looked up at the tall buildings still standing near the sight, knowing the towers had dwarfed them.  If they had fallen to the left or to the right, the destruction would have been immeasurable.

I headed back, scarf around my face and my gloved hands buried in my pockets.  Vendors were scattered throughout the area selling hats with FDNY, NYPD logos, peanuts, and pretzels.  So New York.

Why does evil live as one among us, a dark purple bruise of pain next to the yellow smiles and red hearts of beauty?  I don’t get September 11.  I want to get it.  To get something.   I was glad the church had made it through the attack.  It reminded me that we are in two worlds:  one that was created for us, one that we create for ourselves.  Life is a dance, partnering the two worlds.  I saw in New York, in all of us, a yearning to dance in rhythm with each other, to music greater than ourselves.

Why does evil exist?  Not why, but when.

When the dance step is not accepted, when the beat is not followed nor heard nor felt.  When what could or should be done is not.  When an act of kindness or the gesture of goodwill is skipped, and room is made for the uninvited guest to live as one among us, until it eventually destroys us.  Our hearts are like Ground Zero – there’s an empty space that haunts us.  If we fill it up with thoughts, actions, people, and events of good report, there is no room for unwanted guests.

The world is still good.  Good is still powerful.

I left New York the next day, but not before I signed my name to the memorial wall.

May peace be upon us all.

   — (c) St. John 2001

Courage Called For

Courage is demanded

to stare into the darkness of an airless tunnel of despair

where no light shines, not even at the end…

Courage is demanded

to be a door for fears and despairs to pass through,

and open you to your separateness…

Courage is demanded

in the airless tunnel of despair

that separates you from yourself…

Courage is demanded.

to become the light…

if only because otherwise there would be none.

 — (c) St. John 2012

In Pain

Life has torn the bark from my trunk

And the leaves from my branches.

I am stripped bare and vulnerable

To life’s blows and cracks,

Bent and weeping,

Trembling under the onslaught.

I was once tall and straight.

I stood against the wind for others,

Buffeting, covering, protecting,

While life slashed and dismantled me.

What have I done?

I have stared a monster in the eye.

It turns its strength on me

And hacks at my trunk,

Searching for my life’s vein.

And all the while it taunts me with its power over me.

And so I stand alone,

Rejected and rejecting now,

Semi-dead and hurting,

Wounded and bare against this brutal attack.

But a new wind blows.

A gentler wind, a healing wind.

I look at the missing leaves and bark torn from my trunk.

I look at what is left of me,

Bared to me.

And now I see,

It is the best part of me,

The strongest part of me,

The infinite part of me.

The wind continues to caress.

I stand tall now.

I will thrive another day

To color the life that is before me,

Green and thriving,

Red, yellow, orange, and shining,

Loving and giving.

For I have seen my soul and know

It can never be broken or breached or compromised,

But will always be.

Stripped of all that I had,

I have,

Finally,

Seen me.

— (c) St. John 1986