I Wish You Would Walk with Me
(“And he said
to her, ‘Daughter, your faith has made you whole. Go in peace, and be healed of
your affliction.’” Mark 5:34)
I wish you would walk
with me, I wish you knew me,
I wish you would walk to the unseen city with me.
I cannot see it yet, though the crowds chant its name.
I have watched for its gleaming alabaster piercing the sky,
I have heard the words shouted like a hundred spears
to drive demons away.
And twelve years with the same unknown pain has
slowed my pace while others went ahead on their own
pilgrimage. My courage sinks as I see them disappear
across the hill-spotted margin of the trail.
My face is not disfigured though my brain is tangled
like pasta.
My eyes are not darkened though they burn like fire.
My music comes slower, my voice has no power,
my days are on rewind, my nights project images
of ghostly winter trees, fingers snapping when the ice
weighs them down.
The detours are as lonely as the singular path I have
walked
for decades. I bring up the rear, or turn back, or aside and
can only be reminded that I have cried in wishes, sometimes
in faith that misses the point. And the pain stays; one of
the few companions
that are not afraid of the unheard words I long for.
I wish you would talk with me, I wish you got me,
I wish you would listen to the silence in the dark with me.
I wish you would hear me or heal me. I wish you would
keep me company.
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