• Reaching


    I crouch where the sandstone breaks
    into shallow shelves
    the color of old bone,
    one knee in dust,
    the other
    on loose grain
    that slides downhill
    with every shift of my weight.

    The rock is so warm
    I imagine an ancient woman
    setting a kettle here and
    boiling water for tea.

    Emerging from the crevice—

    yellow.

    I admire the Painter
    through the painted
    and wonder at the Breath
    and the breath
    it takes to stay,
    in this place,

    alive.

    Four open cups
    lifting from a seam
    no wider
    than the edge of my thumb,
    petals folded back
    shamelessly
    in the morning light.

    I lean so close
    I can smell the yellow.
    Or is that the bone?
    I've never smelled either
    so it's hard to say.

    My hair falls forward
    and brushes the soil,
    one strand catching
    on a blade of green—
    I feel like an intruder,

    slowly,
    hooking it behind my ear,
    then lower my face again—
    this time with more care—
    close enough
    to see grains of pollen
    caught in the folds,
    gold dust gathered
    at the center.

    Treasure
    left out in the open.

    A bee was here.

    Maybe an hour ago.
    Maybe it's only been ten seconds.

    How long do bees stay gone?
    Quickly,

    I peer below the bloom.
    Silver leaves spiral outward
    in every direction,
    coated in tiny hairs
    that catch dust,
    light,
    and whatever the wind
    decides to leave behind.

    I run one finger
    along the stem—

    green at first,
    then red,
    then pale
    where the shadow begins
    and sunlight
    never quite
    made the turn.

    I guess there are things
    even the sun never sees.

    The stem narrows,
    twists once,
    then disappears
    into a seam
    too thin
    for my fingernail.

    Still—
    there it goes.

    Down through lime,
    through grit,
    through powdered shell,
    through pockets of black soil
    pressed deep
    between layers of stone
    older than language.

    Roots no thicker
    than thread
    find water
    that probably does not splash.

    I sit back
    on my heels,
    dust coating my jeans,
    my hand still warm
    from the rock,
    and watch
    one yellow cup

    tilt upward
    another fraction
    toward the sun.

    —Iris Lennox
    literary pen name of Jill Szoo Wilson
  • Field Notes from a Splintered Bench


    I sit on the splintered bench
    where the trail drops close
    to the river’s edge,
    one boot untied,
    laces dark from morning grass.

    The wood pricks through my jeans
    only when I swing my legs
    so I have to choose between
    comfort and carefree—
    the mosquito zigzagging
    around my wrist
    reminds me to
    slow down.

    Below me, water folds over stone,
    slides around a half-sunken branch,
    catches for a second
    on something I cannot see,
    then keeps moving.

    A world within a
    world
    within a
    world.
    Each with its own
    beginning, middle, and
    end.

    I rest my elbows on my knees
    and watch cottonwood seeds
    land on the surface,
    play Russian roulette
    with the current and sometimes lose.

    But sometimes they win.

    There used to be an island here
    but now
    only swimming for fish
    and food for one crane whose beak
    was made for moments
    like this.

    Across the bank,
    a sycamore leans like a dancer—
    if I tried that move I might hurt myself.
    But the sycamore—
    graceful,
    roots half exposed,
    holding a wall of mud
    through another season of rain.

    What happens here at night?
    Does the dancer feel lonely?

    I run my thumb
    along the groove
    someone carved into the bench
    years before I found it.
    There used to be a heart
    scribbled here.
    Was it time
    or circumstance
    that rubbed it away?

    Where do all the lovers go
    who leave their hearts
    on benches
    in trees
    and in one another's hands?

    The river keeps carrying
    branches, leaves, foam,
    the occasional flash of silver,

    and twenty feet downstream
    a man in a fishing boat
    has a pole for an arm,
    a hat for eyes,
    and a dream I cannot see—

    I stay on the splintered bench
    swinging my legs
    watching the sunlight

    feeling the shade.

    —Iris Lennox
    literary pen name of Jill Szoo Wilson

  • 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

  • Desert Queen


    In a desert embrace between blue sky and sand,
    A lone cactus flourishes in a thirsty land.
    Her guardian spines, innocent and wise,
    Hold fast against winds she bravely defies.

    Sandy soil enshrines roots running deep.
    Silent sentinels giggle while mimicking sleep—
    Toughened skin above, pulsing with might,
    Bold rebellion beneath the barbaric sunlight.

    White blossoms bloom with delicate grace
    A coruscating crown in this desolate place.
    Petals unfold, poetry in hues,
    Through armored shroud, her beauty renews.

    Survivor of drought and weather obscene,
    The cactus stands, a desert queen.
    In silence she writes mirage-soaked verses
    To a curious soul who nearby traverses.

    “Dear cactus,” he ventures, “courageous and free,
    can you whisper your tales only to me?”
    She smiles coyly—she knows, but won’t tell—
    Accustomed to hellos, acquainted with farewells.

    —Iris Lennox
  • Villains and Heroes


    By Iris Lennox

    “Angels are good, demons are bad.”

    This was the answer when I asked one of my high school–aged acting students to give me an example of something that is “just one thing.”

    “Yep, that’s correct,” I agreed. “Give me another.”

    He thought for a moment. “Heaven is good, hell is bad.”

    “Yes. Now let’s turn our attention to the horizontal. People, places, and things we can touch and see. Give me an example of something that is just one thing.”

    “A car is just a car. A tree is just a tree. This building is just this building. My mom is just my mom.”

    I wrinkled my nose when he made the final assertion. A tale as old as time. He stopped and waited for my response.

    “Your mom isn’t only your mom. But also, a car isn’t only a car. A tree isn’t only a tree. This building isn’t only a building. Try again.”

    A smirk grew across his face. I couldn’t tell if he was amused or annoyed. Maybe both.

    “God is good. The devil is bad.”

    I laughed. “That’s right. Why do you think you have to keep going into the spiritual realm to give me examples of things that are just one thing? Angels, demons. God, Satan. Why is that?”

    He thought for a moment. “Because even though people go back and forth between those two kingdoms, the kingdoms themselves don’t change. We do, but they don’t.”

    It was a good answer.

    “When I’m coaching students to play villains,” I said, “one of the first things we talk about is the fact that villains don’t see themselves as villains. They see themselves as heroes.” Michael Shurtleff makes this point in his book Audition when he reminds us that if one thing is present in a scene, the opposite is also present. If Sally hates Peter, she probably also loves Peter. If Simon is grieving Teresa, it’s because he remembers their happiness.

    We live in tensions. Between here and there. Then and now. Who we are and who we might be.

    Take Walter White in the best series of all time, Breaking Bad. He begins as a high school chemistry teacher. Then comes the diagnosis. The bills. The fear of leaving his family with nothing. He starts cooking meth to provide for them, to secure a future that will outlast him.

    And then something shifts.

    He discovers he’s good at it. The work begins to fill an empty place inside himself. A need for control, for significance, for power. In one of his most famous lines, Walter White reminisces about his drug-lording days and concludes, “I did it for me. I liked it. I was good at it. And… I was really… I was alive.”

    Is Walter White a villain? Or a hero? Both?

    What makes him a villain? The drug that harms other people? The lies? The control he begins to exert over others? The blood that clings to the money he brings home?

    What makes him a hero? The motivations with which he acted early on? The care his son receives? The fact that he’s working to build a future? The moments when he protects the people he loves?

    Ask Walter, and he’ll tell you he’s a hero. Especially when he believes his objective is to provide for his family. That is the story he tells himself.

    And still, the bodies pile up around him.

    Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn writes in The Gulag Archipelago:

    “The line dividing good and evil cuts through the heart of every human being.”

    I turned back to my student.

    “Think of your worst moment. A time when you chose to be cruel. Did you allow yourself to realize you were being cruel, or did you try to convince yourself you weren’t that bad?”

    He didn’t hesitate. “I justified it. I knew I was wrong, but I made excuses. I compared myself to people who are worse than I am.”

    “You chose something dark and still looked for light. What did you do to relieve that tension?”

    “I tried not to think about it. Oh! And, I helped more at home. I told people I was volunteering at church. I stayed busy doing good things, so other people didn’t think I was a jerk. I guess I was also trying to switch back into a good person.”

    I nodded.

    “So you were a villain. And you acted like a hero.”

    “Yeah.”

    “So you weren’t God or the devil. You were aware of both. And you chose, moment by moment, how to move toward what you wanted while carrying both at once.”

    “Yeah.”

    The wheels of thought whirred.

    Nothing is ever just one thing.

    When you’re playing a bad guy, you still have to know what he’s moving toward. Somewhere inside that pursuit, something he recognizes as good is leading him forward.

    It’s true on stage. It’s also true off stage.

  • The Shivering Glove


    Silent are the birds
    whose beaks break free
    the words
    we cannot know.

    Silent is the wind
    who rushes 'round
    each storied trunk whispering
    comfort to yawning souls.

    Silent is the River
    tumbling forth and twirling
    'round hidden lives and laughs
    with burbles of treasured sowing.

    Silent are the leaves
    whose landing paints the ground
    with stippled sighs expressed
    'neath crunching boots.

    Silent are the clouds
    who have seen it all before
    through teary eyes that bring
    impatient choruses to life.

    Silent is God
    whose very Hand is seen
    through the shivering glove of Nature
    speaking eternity.

    To search for silence, friend,
    is but an errand for fools
    until you don the courage to
    step into the woods.

    —Iris Lennox
    literary pen name of Jill Szoo Wilson
  • The Curve of Time


    You might as well befriend the moon—
    embrace her clouded peekaboos.
    And music…

    Receive the tune—
    no time to choose—
    alone in a crowd
    or no one in view.
    And a smell…

    Wafts past your nose—
    what was that?
    Or who?

    Perfume on skin
    or a place that you knew.

    Pause.

    No need to wonder—
    you know who that was—
    and who you are
    as nostalgia winds
    the second hand round.

    “Time is a straight line,” said he.
    “It moves consecutively,
    watches as it goes
    behind and below,
    like walking a path
    that winds into—
    well—
    no one knows.”

    “No one knows,
    that’s right,” said she.
    “Simply put, I do agree.
    But there’s no line to speak of.
    Time bends—not like a knee—
    more like a finger touching its thumb
    or a rainbow finding its spherical end
    and answering with a gentle, Come.”

    Time returns to the places we’ve been.

    One says, “That memory is far.”
    Another, “The moment is here.”

    Yesterday can be set down,
    but the nows of that day
    rise from the ground
    without notice
    or sound—

    to delight or confound—
    it depends on the seconds
    into which they were bound.

    Moments become recollections.
    Recollections, seeds
    with a life of their own.

    Promises and hope,
    gentleness and rage,
    a touch, a glance,
    a well-appointed room
    or a half-written page—

    all sown into skin,
    finding rest in
    smiles and tears,
    repose and toil,
    love and loss,
    freedom and cost,
    and the way sunlight lay
    across the earth
    at the end
    or when it all began.

    “That was back then,” said he.
    “That is today,” said she.

    The minutes listened.

    “There is wisdom in both.”

    Time smiled—
    crouched, quiet—
    behind an autumn tree,
    waiting
    for the final leaf to fall.

    —Iris Lennox
  • Curiosity



    It begins with a question
    as most things do—
    standing still and not understanding
    and then,
    why?
    Sometimes,
    how?

    Before me—
    bands of color arranged with conviction,
    clearly the earth has already decided
    what each layer means
    and is in no hurry to explain itself.

    The greatest beauty rarely does.

    Someone wearing a mud-stained hat
    and pants that swoosh
    when he walks
    has named them.
    Kaibab Limestone at the rim.
    Toroweap beneath it.
    Coconino Sandstone—once dunes,
    moved grain by grain
    under a wind that no longer blows.

    This was a desert, then a sea,
    then something in between
    that does not translate cleanly
    into a single word.

    Mystery mingling with majesty.

    I look at the red—
    Hermit Shale, perhaps—
    soft once,
    willing to be shaped,
    now holding its position
    like a memory that has settled
    into fact.

    Further down, older still,
    Vishnu Schist—
    stone that endured heat,
    pressure,
    nothing erased,
    everything contained and displayed—
    a record I cannot read,
    written in a language
    I have not learned.
    But I recognize this:

    Resilience.

    Two billion years, give or take.
    The number means nothing
    to me
    other than
    "Wow."

    The mind attempts a comparison—
    a human life, a century,
    a civilization rising
    and falling somewhere
    between two lines of rock.

    It does not help.

    Below it all, the river—
    still working.
    Still carrying
    what it has loosened.
    Still,
    rippling with stories that continue.

    The Colorado meanders.
    It does not rush
    for anyone's benefit,
    the way an old man has learned
    to slow down.
    It cuts
    because that is what water does
    when given time
    and a way through.

    I find myself asking questions
    that have no immediate use.

    Who first noticed
    that this was once sand?
    Who looked closely enough
    to see ripple marks
    held in stone?

    Who intuited
    that knowing this
    made the view larger
    and more intimate
    at the same time?

    The tree beside me
    leans into its own inquiry,
    roots set in an answer
    that does not require words.

    Its needles move
    in present tense.

    No concern
    for uplift, erosion,
    continental drift—
    that long, slow negotiation
    between plates.

    As for me—

    I want to know
    how something becomes—
    how pressure instructs
    what to keep
    and what to release.

    How absence—
    of water, of time, of witness—
    enters the record.

    Curiosity does not simplify.
    It accumulates.

    Another name.
    Another era.
    Another process
    quietly at work beneath the visible.

    And suddenly
    the canyon is no longer wide.

    It is specific.

    I stand at the edge
    with a growing suspicion—

    that beauty increases
    with knowledge,

    and that time,
    unmeasured and indifferent,
    is not empty distance
    but the most patient artist
    I have ever encountered.

    —Iris Lennox
  • Peace


    Entering the desert requires
    leaving.
    News, screens,
    the anticipatory leap
    prompted by notification
    dings—
    it all has to go.

    But you can't force it.
    Slowness is the way forward
    and forward means
    a thousand tiny decisions,
    shifts away from
    and toward.

    A choice to leave.
    A choice to remain.

    I step off the path
    into gravel
    that clicks, shifts,
    then settles under my weight.

    Each step
    an announcement in three parts—
    until

    the sound stops.

    Standing in the middle of
    nowhere
    with no one
    and no tether
    my ears stay alert,
    waiting for the next
    disturbance.

    The mind is loud
    around me—wind.
    A choice to hear it.

    The ridge in front of me—
    a long, flat line of stone,
    sun caught along the upper edge,
    gold thinning
    as it slips downward.

    Soon it reaches me—
    a brief warmth begins
    across my cheek.
    I remember this feeling—
    and then I forget why.

    My hand moves to my daypack
    fingers mindlessly searching
    for a shape that isn’t there.

    They rest against lip balm,
    then fall away.

    Heat gathers at the surface of my skin,
    dry and arid,
    without rise or fall.

    A faint sweetness
    threads through the air.
    I turn toward it,
    scanning for blooms,
    for color,
    for a single point to name.

    Only thorn,
    dry stem,
    rock.

    Is this a trick?

    The scent arrives again,
    from nowhere I can point to.

    I thought I knew everything.

    A fly distracts me—
    lands on the back of my hand.
    Its legs tap,
    pause,
    tap again.

    I watch
    instead of brushing it off.

    It lifts
    and disappears
    into the same air.
    I wonder if
    it wondered who
    I am.

    The light continues
    down the ridge in sections—
    one ledge brightens,
    another dims.

    To my left, a saguaro
    with one arm bent
    at a deliberate angle,
    skin ribbed,
    casting a narrow shadow
    that stretches and thins.

    I stand there long enough
    to notice—

    the light passing over me
    keeps going.

    My breathing changes—
    a catch at first,
    then a slower pull,
    air moving deeper
    without effort.

    A bird crosses the sky
    in a straight line,
    wing to wing,
    cutting through blue.

    I follow the line it makes
    until it fades,

    and the sky remains
    wide,
    open.

    —Iris Lennox
  • Trust


    Somewhere between Flagstaff and the desert.
    I pull over
    and shut the door behind me.

    The road is empty, so
    naturally
    I walk to the center
    and stand on the line.

    Silence
    but for the tapping of the cooling engine
    and the sound of waves—
    or maybe wind—
    blowing through pine needles.

    Yellow lines under my feet—
    broken,
    then whole,
    then broken again,
    each piece looks like it's racing
    but I know better:
    resting.

    Ahead,
    the road lifts.

    Not much—
    just enough
    to take the next stretch
    out of view.

    Driving,
    you don't notice
    how pretty the variation of
    black, gray, and blue
    after years of repaving.

    You just keep going.

    Inside the car you
    are listening, or talking, or thinking . . .
    anticipating,
    over the hill,
    onto the next stretch
    already laid out.

    Standing here,
    the journey slows
    then
    stops.

    Everything here knows one another
    and all is stable, but the wind
    and the clouds
    and the sun and moon and stars—
    but the road.

    Each yellow line serves a purpose
    to guide
    to rightly divide . . .
    but also to watch
    to remember
    to enjoy?

    It occurs to me in the middle of the road:

    Trust in the Lord
    with all your heart,
    and do not lean on your own understanding.
    In all your ways acknowledge him,
    and he will make
    straight
    your paths.

    No matter how fast
    or slow
    I move, God.

    The road is the road.

    The adventure—
    where I go—
    is up to You.

    —Iris Lennox
    literary pen name of Jill Szoo Wilson

    Proverbs 3:5–6