A Walk in Autumn: a poem
I took a walk around the neighborhood
to work out frustration and sadness
in the fall air.
The pace of my feet on the sidewalk and its leaves
got my heartbeat going faster.
Blowing wind against my hair and my skin and my eyes
got my tears going easier.
Thinking of you, and you, and you
got breath catching in my throat
hot and painful.
Worrying about that, and this, and that
got my palms clenching
beside my hips.
Wanting the things I want so hard
got me wanting to scream
and be a mess and not care.
I pictured myself crawling onto a pile of crisp leaves
and choosing one leaf to rip into little tiny bits
until there was nothing more to rip
and then moving on to another
and somehow 15 seemed like a good number in my reverie.
I thought maybe if I ripped 15 of those beautiful dying leaves
until they were no more
and cried enough and yelled enough
there would be some relief at the end of it
and I wouldn’t feel this anymore–
this angst and this pain.
But I didn’t.
I just kept walking because that’s what made sense,
corners of my eyes bruised from impatiently flicking tears away
breath stuck in my chest, just giving me enough to keep moving
thinking of all the yous– both hating and loving
fists clenched as my hips took me where I need to go
and the 15 leaves behind me now
crumpled up and moldy and dead.
And I’m sure there weren’t any answers there anyway.
Sign up for Helena's Blog
Welcome!
I am a coach, facilitator and program director in Denver, Colorado. I bring a high-performance mindset from 18 years leading in global corporations, startups, non-profits and Higher Ed. I’ve also honed skills in emotional intelligence and practical spirituality through training with ICF, Shadow Work®, Insights Discovery and motherhood. If you’re ready to do powerful inner work, and also get tangible results in your external environment, please follow my blog and reach out to talk about coaching!
Recent Comments
- HelenaAnn on The Four Quarter Model
- Mariette Strub on The Four Quarter Model
- Brianna on Tales of a Working Parent in 2020: The 3 Spheres of Attention
- Ruth Buckingham on Driving in Emotional Weather
- Ruth on Keep Your Labels To Yourself, Thanks