I ponder on the coming cloud...
Clouds can be both a promise of water to a parched land, or the threat of darkness and storm. One of my means of meditation is to spend time with a cloud as it transforms from one moment to another. I have no control over its continuous change, but I can witness, accept, and learn from my experience.
I imagine the cloud as a beast of the sky that is heading towards me, yet as it does so, I am also aware that it will change well before it reaches me, and its threat will subside because the nature of the air that surrounds it is dynamic. As I watch the coming cloud I keep my calm.
At the heart of every snowflake is a nucleus of dust. This tiny particle could originate from any number of places: the smoke from a forest fire; the minute specks of volcano ash that are pushed into the high atmosphere; the fine debris that falls from a meteor as it streaks across the sky; the microscopic particles picked up by the wind from plant spores and the cells of feather and skin that living things shed each day.
I ponder on the journey of a particle of dust. The dust from one living thing to another.
From someone standing on a hill looking skyward, from distant sand, and then for days across an ocean far below, until on high, ice crystals enfold and change the particle of dust to form a single snowflake that lightly tumbles to the earth and, after time, comes to fall upon my palm. I sense its cold but cannot feel its weight. like the image that accompanies the poem, it is as light as light itsesf, waiting to be known by the warmth of my attention. I easily ignore a solitary snowflake, yet its journey can be as great as any I have made.
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A Solitary Snowflake Falls
A speck of dust from soil or sand,
From powder down or loose brushed skin,
Encased within its centre lays,
A prick from past of living thing.
As snowflake falls,
The grain returns in shallow husk of crystal white,
Come gently lay upon this earth,
In wait and warmth in day or night.