Early Hours
Walking amidst the air held within the early hours,
among the premature sunlight rising into the day’s fruition.
This early morning wind reminds me of my youth—
walking upon red-gray gravel,
towards the bright yellow bus,
windows smudged with fingerprints and nose prints,
with children pressing their cheeks agains the cool glass.
The birds are chorusing today—
their song reminds me of the one once sung within the backyard of my parent’s home,
where my brother and I would settle our backs on the trampoline,
out of breath from trying to out-jump the other;
the same song sung when we’d lay opposites on the hammock,
swung between two fully-matured aspens—
chatting about our future lives with sore-stomach laughter,
as the warm wind enlivened us,
the shade cooled us.
These particular rays within the early hours are the same that shone through the french-door windows,
onto me and my sister, within our shared bedroom—
with our silly dance routines
and polly-pocket ventures.
The sky is the same shade of blue—
the one where my mother would extend her neck,
and throw her head back,
marveling on the way the clouds drifted upon their own, vast blue ocean.
But the sun shines today, also.
Within these hours, the clouds skirt across the sky,
and move with this fresh, crisp air that I steal into my lungs.
These trees with the fluttering leaves, this morning,
reminds me of today,
and will remind me of tomorrow, too.