Live Virtual Group Session: 12PM EST January 26th 2024

Thank you to everyone who joined us for this session!

For this session we read a poem “The Earth” by Sheila Black, posted below.

Our prompt was: Write about a moment of unexpected connection.”

Participants are warmly encouraged to share what you wrote below (“Leave a Reply”), to keep the conversation going here, bearing in mind that the blog of course is a public space where confidentiality is not assured.

Also, we would love to learn more about your experience of these sessions, so if you’re able, please take the time to fill out a follow-up survey of one to two quick questions!

Please join us for our next session Friday February 2nd at 12pm EST, with more times listed on our Live Virtual Group Sessions.


"The Earth" by Sheila Black

What can I tell her over breakfast when she says
her son suffers from madness, and because there
is no mental health, he has ended up in jail,
and she is relieved, because at least he might
be safe there or he might get to see the doctor.
We are eating egg-white omelets; we are counting
carbs. We are buttoning ourselves in our clean dresses
and high-heeled shoes in order to bring home the bacon,
doing what we need to do and “It is what it is.”
Her granddaughter and daughter are living with her
in the one bedroom. Nights, the daughter lounges by
the pool, looking at her phone, while she teaches the child
to plant seeds in a flower bed she feels bad she does not own.
She tells she cried in the car coming here; she did not know
me then. She thought we would be talking to each other
the whole time about what we are selling, what
the other might buy, but somehow we left that behind
over the toast with the tiny pots of strawberry jam.
Who can explain all this luxury, all this despair?
Or how we all hold our secret shames so close
and gloss our lips with “Cinnamon Fire” as if that were
some legitimate form of protection. Cinnamon Fire!
She just turned fifty. I tell her wait ten years—you
won’t know more, but you will get closer to forgiving,
because it is all happening on a wheel that spins
so fast. Why not stop to look at the pink flowers
you’ve planted with your granddaughter? Why not feel
your bare toes in the good wet earth? We play with the crusts
on our plates. The waitress takes the coffee away. We
are strangers again, each carrying our lonely fear
our children won’t find their way, wishing for them
some inner logic—sacred trust of earth and self, that exists
for each of us so far within, so far under the skin, we
can’t even begin to say what it is made of; it merely is,
poised between love and grief: the blue space we call wonder,
which is merely the dew on the grass, the shadow the sun
makes as it rolls over the vast skin of the Earth.

Copyright © 2023 by Sheila Black. Originally published in Poem-a-Day on July 28, 2023, by the Academy of American Poets.

12 thoughts on “Live Virtual Group Session: 12PM EST January 26th 2024

  1. Rita B's avatar Rita B

    A moment of unexpected connection
    Rita Basuray

    The one I write about happened in nature. Sumit and I were in a car on the 11-mile circuit of Cade’s cove where we go to watch deer, bear and others from our car. Very soothing.

    We stopped to see a deer peacefully munching on grass – oblivious to our intrusion. From our vantage point, we also saw a rabbit hopping towards the deer. We waited. What would happen?

    The bunny landed, their noses touching. The deer jumped a bit and almost said in an anthropomorphic way,” well, hello!” and started eating again. The bunny sauntered off. This was only a fleeting moment of connection. Did it mean anything?

    Like

  2. michele348's avatar michele348

    A moment of unexpected connection~~~

    I saw her sitting in the waiting room of the ER.
    A place of fear, anxiety, and emerging conditions.
    A young son sat leaning into his mother’s lap
    shimmering in doubt and uncertainty.
    Mom’s face showed fear for the future of her son
    she so loved but at this moment,
    felt so powerless.

    I walked up to the front desk, asked for a blanket and brought it over to the mother
    with the hope it might help.

    For that singular moment in time,
    a smile appeared on the mother’s face
    and she thanked me for my gesture.

    In those moments,
    two strangers,
    two mothers
    came to briefly know each other,
    bonded by the love we had
    for our children.

    Like

  3. michele348's avatar michele348

    A moment of unexpected connection~~~

    I saw her sitting in the waiting room of the ER.
    A place of fear, anxiety, and emerging conditions.
    A young son sat leaning into his mother’s lap
    shivering in doubt and uncertainty.
    Mom’s face showed fear for the future of her son whom
    she so loved but at the moment,
    felt so powerless.

    I walked up to the front desk, asked for a blanket, and brought it over to the mother
    with the hope it might help.

    For that singular moment in time,
    a smile appeared on the mother’s face
    as she thanked me for my gesture.

    In that moment,
    two strangers,
    two mothers
    came to briefly know each other,
    bonded by the love we had
    for our children.

    Like

  4. Elizabeth's avatar Elizabeth

    She shared it with our group…

    The trauma of the death of her child.

    Did the setting open her up to share

    Or would she have shared with anybody

    Because she needed to

    At that moment?

    We will never know,

    But she put it out there

    For us to hold,

    For us to bear witness.

    Now it has become

    A part of our collective narratives.

    Liked by 1 person

    • michele348's avatar michele348

      Elizabeth… to share something so traumatic, so devastating to another requires a level of trust built between the two. At that moment in time, our group was deemed a suitable receptor of the burden that was held within her heart. And as you said, it became a part of us who were present hearing those words. Burdens/hardships become lighter if they are shared. Hopefully, that was the case for her.

      Like

  5. rehavia6's avatar rehavia6

    Write About an Unexpected Connection

    Many years ago my friends and I were pushing our babies in their strollers. The sidewalk we were walking on had a park on one side and a busy New York City street on the other. Suddenly, one of my friends screamed. I turned around to see a rat bouncing off the top of her stroller and a hawk swooping down to grab the rat it had dropped from its talons as it was flying. The hawk kept on flying and we continued our walk. The momentary intersection between the natural world and urban life is something I will never forget.

    Liked by 1 person

    • michele348's avatar michele348

      wow…quite the experience! Rats and hawks falling from the skies of NYC! I’m glad I live in a rural area of PA! No rats or hawks dive bombing from the skies here…well at least not lately!

      Like

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