Believe in the World
The storm clouds gather,
swallows fly low and robins
grip their perch, birds cling
tightly during storms, as do I,
holding on to the nest as long
as they can. It’s not as easy as
you think, this waiting,
the tick-tock of the second hand,
listening for every footfall.
The air holds its breath—then breaks.
Rain stitches sky to earth,
each drop a small insistence
that something must give.
Footsteps leading to the door,
your urgent departure. I loosen,
just enough to feel the branch sway
without naming it loss.
Somewhere the swallows turn,
not fleeing but folding the storm
into their wings. And when the wind
passes, I am still here—
not unshaken,
but less afraid to let go
of what was never mine to hold
2 thoughts on "Believe in the World "
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the swallows “folding the storm/ into their wings” is especially exquisite in a poem true to its title
Yes, I too love these lines
“Somewhere the swallows turn,
not fleeing but folding the storm
into their wings.”