Today's offering is a little story. If you'd rather listen to me read it, you can do so on YouTube. Here's the link: https://youtu.be/c2GYV844DZM
I found an arrowhead, And I tied it around my neck As a symbol of power and strength, A memory of the endless wars And a message to myself and others That I still remember the ancient art. Not really. It was a trinket tied with leather That I found in a gift shop. And I thought that it looked cool. I wore it to school the next day And my friends thought that it was cool, So I kept on wearing it through my youth. I wore it on graduation day, And I wore it when I went away a soldiering. And that did not go so well for me. But we won the war and I came home With the arrowhead still hanging around my neck. And when I did, I found another war waiting, The war to make a life and living As a broken combat vet. And that didn’t go so well for me. I married once. I married twice. I married once again. And all the while, I wore the arrowhead. The leather wore out several times And I replaced it. But I never threw it away. I don’t know why. I lived alone in my late forties and thereafter. I slept in abandoned cars. I slept in tents in the woods. People would have said that I was homeless But I was not. Just unable, unwilling, I’m not sure which, To try at a losing game. And I drank a lot. That started with the war And continued throughout the losing battle of my life. And I was never able to connect with people very well, Wives and children, coworkers. Even my siblings, we were close when I was young, But things were different after the war. And by the time I was fifty, they didn’t recognize me. To be honest I didn’t recognize myself. But I’m not so sure I cared. I lived a long time that way before I got help. And I have never really gotten better. But with the help of a higher power, I sobered up. And when I did, I let myself remember, Not everything, that’d be too much, But the good things, Particularly the people that I loved. And even now, they stand out in my memory With amber light around. And I think that I am at peace with what I’ve lost And hopeful for the thing that I have found. And today, the winter light is bright out on the desert. I untie the arrowhead from my neck And hike as far as I can manage. I dig a hole and drop the old arrowhead in, Cover it up and tamp it down. And then I make my way back home. And I am not sure why I did that. It was a trinket, bought in a gift shop. And I’m not sure why I wore it for so long. But now that it’s gone, I feel strangely lighter, And the future is bright before me. And that is a strange thing For an old man like me to feel.
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