
It wasn’t a decision, not really
just the way the light spilled
through the live oaks like it meant something.
I was halfway to the barn,
mud still soft in the arches of my feet,
when I realized I’d forgotten
what I came out here for.
The gate hung open like a question
I didn’t want to answer.
A breeze came through,
smelling of rain and far-off pasture,
and I stopped mid-step,
not from weariness,
but from some hush rising in me
like maybe the world was about to speak
and I didn’t want to miss it.
It’s the kind of quiet you don’t break,
the kind that’s been walking beside you for miles
without ever asking for a name.
You start to wonder
if the ache in your chest
isn’t grief or hope
but just room being made.
There’s a cricket in the corner of the fence line
tuning its wings,
and a spider’s web silvering
between two posts that weren’t meant
to hold anything beautiful.
But they do.
And I think maybe I do too,
though I don’t know what.
Something I haven’t said yet.
Something not done being felt.
The cow lows like she knows
I’ll come back soon
like she’s patient with the pause.
And I think:
maybe that’s what faith is.
Not a leap.
Just a leaning.
Just a breath you let out
before the next step.
About the Creator
Taylor Ward
From a small town, I find joy and grace in my trauma and difficulties. My life, shaped by loss and adversity, fuels my creativity. Each piece written over period in my life, one unlike the last. These words sometimes my only emotion.



Comments (1)
Oooooh I love this poem so much. Was hooked with light spilling like it meant something, the whole thing is wonderful.