A Quote Worth Sharing

I am currently reading The 90-Day Memoir: Tell the Story of Your Life by Alan Watt. Each chapter begins with a quote. I wanted to share this one because I thought it was profound. There’s some debate online about the origin of the quote, whether it came from a Cherokee legend or from somewhere else. But either way, the words are worth noting.

It also reminded me of a poem I wrote about a wolf several years ago.

The Mystery of the Wolf

A summer evening in upstate New York—
a backyard sprinkler hisses
while the smell of fresh-cut grass
is pungent and delicious.
Crickets chirp and a coffee-colored mare
snorts from across the barbed-wire fence.

I am alone, kicking a soccer ball,
when a gray wolf emerges from
the high weeds lining the fence.
I try to run, but my legs lock up,
and I tumble to the ground.

The wolf circles me,
then sweeps in on my limp frame.
I can hear its stomach growling
as it hovers over me.
The tongue is extended
and drool splashes my face.
The wolf takes my neck in its mouth,
but does not bite down.

And I wake up in my bed,
thankful that the encounter is just a dream.
I am safe, and no wolf invades my room.
Yet I remain troubled,
afraid of closing my eyes,
drifting back to sleep
and ending up at the mercy
of another predator.

Previously published in the collection Dreaming of Lemon Trees: Selected Poems by Francis DiClemente (Finishing Line Press, 2019).

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May You Live

I was leafing through a hefty stack of unpublished poems in my home office yesterday, and this one struck me. I think the you referenced in the poem is actually me—so I need to heed my own advice.

May You Live

May you come to the realization
That you have no control.

May you relinquish your desire
To dictate the path of your existence.

May you surrender to the absurdity
Of this exercise in futility,

Understanding that this beautiful mess
Known as life will lead you
where it wants you to go. No exceptions.

May you realize that death is rushing toward you,
And it’s coming for all of us.

May you realize that your family and friends
Will be unable to spare you from this fate.

Why do I pester you with these dark thoughts?
Simply so you’ll pause to appreciate the few moments
We are granted on the surface of this earth.

The chance to mix and mingle
And touch and caress with flesh and spirit.

The opportunity to laugh and love and interact
before disease and illness and old age

Make us weary of carrying around
A body that will soon be a corpse.

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