Eyes Closed, Garden
sensory mapping
it’s a new way of seeing.
eyes closed.
flagstones, rough through the soles.
the first before the first is loose.
then three.
then level — eight even paces.
four steps up.
grass.
lavender,
a breath from my right,
held high.
the birdbath beyond
fuller than yesterday.
rain speaks in levels.
I map the morning in scent:
apple blossom; April wind,
Cox and Discovery,
laurel, lilac,
yes, the rose.
greenhouse.
not glass
but what it holds:
soil still remembering
last year’s tomatoes,
faint ghosts of cucumber vine,
green, bitter-sweet.
staying in its dark
even now …that scent,
waiting.
stop.
here.
the place I might fall.
the air shifts
warmer.
I hear green again
but softer here,
as if it’s thinking.
spring opens its throat to
blackbird, finch,
and the crow
I know.
my tulips, still no scent.
and then
light,
not seen
but entering
as if the eyes
remember
before I open them.
Written for Writers’ Digest Poem-a-Day Challenge for April 2026. Prompt word: New

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