Eyes of All



Morning lifts from the desert
just before noon.
I immediately regret
each moment I missed—
where was I when the sun rose
here?

Light moves across basalt,
sage,
rabbitbrush,
the red earth reflects
warmth
back into the blue.

Sunshine and earth,
a love affair.

A strand of hair
crosses my mouth
and tickles my nose—
as I swipe it away,
I discover
heat-burnished tenderness.

Sunshine, earth, and me—
a love affair.

When I first arrived,
I heard the crunch of my boots
and all I brought with me.
Water and ice sloshing against steel.

Also

half-finished conversations.
A list.
A sentence.
A prayer,
still wanting to know Him more.

Then the wind rises
through the sage

and every branch answers.

Not all at once.
Antiphonal.
There must be a conductor here
somewhere.

One stem,
then another,
then a hundred more
clicking, brushing, rattling
in no hurry
to finish the song.

I have a feeling the song
began at the beginning and
will go on
forever—
it is a gift to hear this movement.

A Common Raven
crosses low over the wash,

wings opening
like someone who knows me
and awaits my approach
to the threshold.

Clearly, I am welcome here.

Higher still,
a White-throated Swift
not to be outdone
cuts through the blue
so quickly
I hear the turn
before I find the bird.

At my feet,
a bee disappears
into yellow rabbitbrush,
comes out dusted,
and goes right back in.

I'm proud of the bee
and respect it enough
to be a little scared, too.

Farther out,
a Horned Lark
drops three clean notes
into the open country
and flies off again.
I'm struck by his boldness
in speaking and not waiting—
tell the truth,
then let the echoes
do the work.

Beauty and truth—
companions from here to
Kingdom come.

Even the grasshopper
seems to understand.

Click.
Up.
Moving on.
Trust.

And between all of it—

space.

Wide, sunlit,
unoccupied space.

The kind that only exists
here
and anywhere
there is desert.
Around the globe
but this one is mine,
today.

I stand
until my thoughts
up.
Click.
Moving on.
Standing still—

Stone.
Feather.
Wing.
Dust.
Breath.

The desert receives
what morning brings

and sends it upward
in praise.

—Iris Lennox

Psalm 145