The Woodworker
I was born into nature-- blush-faced cedar
from young hands, strong and sure
I did not yet know uniform,
only chaos, only overgrowth-
fierce foliage and bounties of evergreen.
Under his wing, I learned order.
For years I stood tall, just like he wanted.
My board-straight posture was one of pride.
He visited often, my father.
You learn a lot about someone
by the way they depend on those around them,
and for a long time,
I was the only thing around him.
We’d spend days and nights alone,
he’d work things out of wood
and sip moonshine out of a flask
while I’d watch it drip down the trees.
That was a long time ago.
His once steady hands splintered,
aged into fragile pine needles.
He withered, and crumbled
and with him, the meadows lost their life
and the sky was barren
Spring came years later
when his children,
and his children’s children sprouted up
in the place he once rested his roots
though I was old, and my bones had
sun-bleached over the years.
they’d follow that old trail
trampled by that man
and sit upon my lap, let me tell them stories
with every creak of my frame
of all the things their grandfather built
look at me, I’d say,
father created me long ago
from a tree not far from here
and I’m still standing tall-
-so are you.
Remember when you fall asleep
in the beds he built
with the blankets he wove
to thank him-
make him proud
Stand tall, it’s what he always did
It’s what he would have wanted.