Anonyme
They don't explain themselves.
They don't say: I am leaving now,
and here is why,
and I'll be back in spring.
They just lift.
Turn once into the wind
to test the direction,
then go.
I have been watching them
from the kitchen window
all autumn.
The way they gather first,
sitting in the oak
like punctuation marks
on a sentence
about to end.
Then one goes.
Then several.
Then the tree is empty
and the sky has swallowed them.
I keep trying to learn this.
The part before the lifting:
when you know it's time
and you don't argue.
When you fold yourself
into what's coming
instead of holding onto
the branch you're on.
I've been practicing.
I stand at the door sometimes
with my coat already on
and I stay there a moment.
I feel the outside air.
I feel the way it pulls.
I notice whether I want to go
or whether I just think I should.
Birds don't have this problem.
They have hollow bones
and no opinions
about their own leaving.
I have both.
I'm working on the bones.