Finding Orion And Ourselves – Blogging Free Verse

A young friend spoke today
a memory,
when he was lost and alone
in a strange and distant land.

Looking up,
far and away from home,
he saw thousands of stars.
And then, three.

Orion’s belt,
the Hunter,
just like in the sky
of his Georgia home.

Finding Orion,
no longer lost,
he felt safe,
secure,
protected,
and grateful
for the awareness.

His faithful memory
gave me
my own recollections
of finding Orion:
Diamonds hung
on a canyon wall.

That deep southern Utah night
was the first time
(at least that I recall),
but there have been many more
since then.

My first night
in my new Deep South home,
I stepped out
onto my back porch.
I was alone.

In this new place,
nervous and unfamiliar,
I breathed the gathering gloom,
sucked in the dank humors,
and looked heavenward.

There he was,
belt strongly girded,
Orion, the Hunter over me.
“Hello, old friend!” I shouted
and wept for gladness
and relief.

Next,
alone with family,
a celebration
in the South Pacific
with my son
and his new bride.

Late at night,
I waded into Moorea’s
unfamiliar warm waters,
leaned back
and looked up.

Surprise!
Orion the mighty Hunter
was there, but
standing on his head!
I still, again,
waved and shouted:
“Hello, old friend!”
and laughed for joy.

(I hadn’t yet heard
Moana: Aue, aue
Te fenua, te malie
Na heko hakilia, 
but when I did,
lost yet not
with my daughter
on our aue way
to a paradise waterfall,
I wept again,
just like now.)

As wisdom from the pulpit spoke,
I realized:
The bearded one
was right.
God is aware.
Always.
And He lets us know.

We might feel lost.
We might forget
who we are,
where we are going,
what we’re about.

But He who is mighty to save
will let us know,
always,
where we are,
always,
who we are,
always,
that we are watched over,
always,
if we look to the Heavens.

Not My Poem (A sample)

We’ve lived
side by side
for years.
We’ve shared
recipes,
movies,
eggs.
Our kids
have baked cookies
and
walked to school
and
had first day of school photos
and
last day of school breakfasts.
We’ve taught
each other’s kids at church.
We’ve sat
in council meetings
together
as auxiliary presidents.
We’ve been
visiting teaching companions.
We’ve carpooled
and
attended the same
concerts
and
graduations
and
ridden to promenades
and
traded weeks
for lunch bunch.

And
now we’re both losing
our husbands.
Both are dying:
–hers, physically,
and mine, spiritually.

Together we weep
As she faces
the loss of her husband
And I face
the loss of mine.
Two men,
friends,
now disabled.
One by chance,
the other by choice.

I worry about
wearing out my welcome,
but wonder if maybe
our mutual sharing
is helpful.
She can vent to me
about exactly
what’s going on,
maybe in some way
she doesn’t talk
to anyone else.

And
we weep
together
and hold on
together.