Healing



At the edges of Sunset Crater Volcano National Monument,
stone lies where it came to rest.

Dark, porous,
each piece holding the memory of heat,
each surface fixed
in the moment of its becoming.

Across the field—
fragments.

Lifted, scattered,
set in place by force
and the long settling after.

In the slow passage of it—
through wind, through cold,
through the steadfast work of seasons—
a different order solidifies.

Between the stones—
vibrant lime green
equally brilliant yellow

Pushing through fissures,
rooted in spaces of fracture,
drawing from elements above and below,
rising from where the earth was devastated.

A bird alights on a twisted branch.

And we, who come searching for shape,
stumble through the surface,
reading the ground for what we imagine,
while beneath our steps
roots move among the stone,
threading through
death and life.

On the surface—
rock, jagged
silent warnings
emanating from frozen faces.

Beneath—
a rumbling of breath,
forced tilling turned to growth,
through time's signature shocks of
courage.

The land holds both together,
dividing nothing,
choosing neither.

In the keeping of it,
in the settling of what has been cast down
and the quiet rising that follows,
God gives:

what remains
where it has fallen,
set in the ground
as it came to rest—

and what takes root
within the break,
drawing life
from the opened places—

and healing—
not as the return
of what was,
but as something new
set among the fractures,
color rising—but more,
the story
not only of wreckage
but of life
where the ground
came apart.

—Iris Lennox