Sitting on the porch of the place my mom has taken for a month in the Rio Grande Valley for the purpose of seeing and photographing the migrating birds, after having been here a week and finally (at least for the day, for this moment) settled in with the rhythm of the wind in the trees, I’m reminded of a Wendell Berry poem that begins with the line: “When despair for the world grows in me.”
Despair, with its tearful face, wringing its hands and crying out things in my great-great grandmother’s voice as she herself did when she would say, “God only knows when we’ll see each other again!” (She said this every single Sunday when my grandmother’s family left her house after Sunday lunch and meant it, tears, wrung hands, and all. Every. Single. Sunday.)
It's too easy to let the despair in.
Much too easy. And whether for internal or external reasons, whether rage or distress are justified, whether dissatisfaction and drive are worthy motivators, despair is a hard relative to live with. Its voice persistent. Its advice in support of hopelessness and helplessness.
And though I haven’t been quite overwhelmed by despair, it has been there, hovering, waiting.
But here, where the vermilion flycatchers, one as red as a jewel and the other dressed in colors that blend in with the trees and ground, flit and dash, snatch insects out of the air, and chase each other in their springtime wooing games, I can, like Berry, “come into the peace of wild things.”
Here, as a welcome breeze keeps the heat from becoming oppressive, I can sit outside (mosquito free) all day long while I write and “feel above me the day-blind stars.”
I had—in living the city life, in living in the thoughts within my head, in living in the skin of my own body (too often unappreciated and sometimes even despised)—almost forgotten what it is to be a part of the natural world. How lucky I’ve been in the past to have had winters and springs in the Wyoming wilderness where it was me alone with the wild things. To have explored the mountains of Colorado (my soul calls the mountains home) and stumbled upon views (and at altitudes) that took my breath away. To have wandered Norwegian forests and walked under the large Swedish sky. To have porch-sat my days away at my friend’s house in Oregon watching hummingbirds wage ferocious wars and spiders spin their webs.
I had nearly forgotten but not stopped yearning, if not for this location exactly (though it does quite nicely, after all), for places “where the wood drake rests in his beauty” and in which I could be in “the presence of still water.”
And, look, here I am, outside again, weaving words together as all around me the numerous, splendid distractions keep me lifting my eyes and turning my head to see:
the cowbird and the catbird,
the painted bunting who touches down on the table where I’m working and springboards away, the bright yellow and orange orioles with their black caps and capes,
the Texas tortoise that marches ponderously by barely sparing me a glance,
the ducks flying in formation overhead,
the rabbits, jack and cottontail,
and the single deer bounding out of sight.
And the lizards, those tiny, wingless dragons, that race across the sandy dirt, over the pottery in the flowerbeds, and sun themselves with neck-extended satisfaction in between hunting trips.
The ever-present mockingbirds, lark sparrows, white winged doves, and the pair of woodpeckers that call to each other all throughout the day as they peck any material—wood, metal, glass— to which they can put their beaks.The butterflies that sift across the yard like tufts of cottonwood blown by the wind.
The roadrunner that comes two steps up on the porch to check me out before hopping down, lengthening its long neck, and darting away.
The reddest cardinal in the universe that makes this place its home along with the vocal great kiskadee and the bobwhite.
It is here among all this teeming, moving, abundant life that I remember that my life, too, can be a poem.
And that while there is always despair to be found, there is also peace.
Here, where my mom was generous enough to let me come along for the ride, I am reassured by the remembrance of another’s poetry and find that, as Berry so beautifully and perfectly said:
“For a time
I rest in the grace of the world, and am free.”
*The Peace of Wild Things by Wendell Berry: https://www.scottishpoetrylibrary.org.uk/poem/peace-wild-things-0/
To see my mom’s exquisite capturing of birds (and occasionally other things) check out her Instagram page here:
https://www.instagram.com/miscelaineously/