The Early Shift
To rise early.
To sit in the holy dark.
To sit like a mother
keeping watch over their child.
To sit like a lover
who watches the gentle slumber
of the beloved.
To sit like a sage
watching for the ripples of wisdom
on the face of the deep pool
of the soul.
To sit and mingle our breath
with the fiery breeze of the
hovering dove.
To sit and allow our silence
to become a word of the Word
who unseen holds all things
in being.
This is our work.
To sit.
To breathe.
To pray.
To be.
To watch with holy attention
the places and times that so few see,
that so few notice.
To sit with the last star in the sky.
To sit with the first bird’s tentative song,
little more than a whisper,
little more than a breath.
To watch for the hidden point of turning,
when it is no longer night,
when it is not yet day,
when it is the holy time
of ending and beginning,
after moonset, before sunrise,
when for the briefest of moments
the sky is the colour of heaven.
When the mind ceases its chatter,
when the heart may be surrendered to the silence,
and the silence warmly hold
all tears,
all suffering,
all sorrow,
all pain,
to itself
in infinite compassion.
Breathing peace,
breathing love,
witnessed by our sitting,
witnessed by our presence,
witnessed by our silence.
Until the silence yields
to the sounds of slow waking
as the world pulls itself together,
puts off the little daily death of sleep
and stumbles towards busyness anew,
and thinks only now,
only now,
do things begin.
No comments:
Post a Comment