Ten Ways of Looking at an Oak Tree
Lillian W.

This piece is a reflection of myself and allowed me to view my experiences from a different perspective. While writing this, I began to understand that the hard parts of my life do not diminish my strength but prove my ability to endure.
Ten Ways of Looking at an Oak Tree
Lily Winship
I
There it stood among the rest
A fist of bark punching the sky, reaching for something more
II
In the winter, it was only bones,
A black vein stitched across a white sky,
I am dry. I am empty
III
In spring, it loosened
Green whispers unfolding from clenched teeth
Each leaf a small decision to live again
IV
By summer, it was a shadow
A long-forgotten piece of wood
Light caught in its stained-glass peepholes
Children kneeling in its shade like tree frogs
V
Wind made me free
Branches spoke in a language of creaks and hush
Translating weather into music
VI
An acorn fell
A single knock against the earth,
A promise disguised as something small
VII
Lightning once split its shoulder,
Not large enough to make it fall,
But enough to leave little white lines along my wrist
Running from rib to root
Yet it kept standing, unashamed of survival
VIII
Ants mapped their continents
Crawling along my bark skin
Knowing the oak only as terrain, not symbol
IX
Scars trace over my body like roots from a tree
Bending in perfectly imperfect ways
You tell me I am strong
But I sway the second a breeze comes by
X
I am a scarred and charred battlefield
Begging for one second of rain

