Archives for posts with tag: Wyoming

Snider

The Sky Beyond
by Melissa Snider

Our move feels like a torn piece of paper. Written on one half is my childhood: smokestacks, sleepovers, and snow days, feeding ducks and dodging seagulls on Lake Ontario, black flies and birthdays in the Adirondacks. The other torn piece is my beyond and continues still: unending winters render summer a miracle, sky so blue you might fall in, the round smell of sage rubbed between fingers and on the back of my neck. Before we came to Wyoming, I didn’t know the sky could be so big. Now that I know, I’ve never been able to leave for long.

What to protest first, the loss of my entire social life and therefore my life, or that we were moving to a place where antelope outnumbered people? I bid tearful goodbyes to best friends. They promised to write. We sold our white house with green shutters. The moving truck came, and we filled it. Driving in August heat meant a stop at every Dairy Queen. We peeled our legs from seats to sit in air conditioning until we got goosebumps. Endless hours of “don’t cross this line” and “she’s looking at me” from the backseat should have made my parents reconsider, but undeterred, they drove west.

Twenty-five years later, mountain ranges that surround our valley are unchanged, but I’ve become a mother. Tonight my husband put our girls to bed while I walked the dog. To the west, boiling clouds were painted pink by the sun, set but still shining, behind the mountains.  Wyoming peeled the top off my world, and I found this thin air is where I breathe best. I crave this loneliness, our cathedral of mountains, the blessing and threat of every unexpected storm.

AUTHOR’S PHOTO CAPTION: The author (left) and her sister Emily with their family’s moving truck, parked outside of their childhood home in Oswego, New York, 1991.

NOTE FROM THE AUTHOR: I loved this theme and sat down to map out all the “moves” in my life, real and metaphorical. I realized that most of who I am today is a result of the actual move my parents were crazy and brave enough to make in a matter of weeks when I was 11. It felt like the end of the world for me at the time, but was the best gift they could have given us. Three hundred words is so brief; I wasn’t sure how to express the enormity of my emotions for this rugged place. Soon I realized the sky, the first thing I smile at when returning from an East Coast visit, was the vehicle to capture my love for Wyoming.

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR: Melissa Snider is an elementary school librarian and writer who has lived in Wyoming for 25 years. She has bachelor’s degrees in Creative Writing and Spanish from the University of Montana, and a master’s degree in Library and Information Science from Simmons College in Boston. She grew up partly on the shore of Lake Ontario in upstate New York, and partly in the shadow of the Tetons in Jackson Hole [Wyoming]. On days off, when not reading, writing, or folding laundry, Melissa seeks out family-friendly adventures in the mountains with her husband and two young daughters.

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SECRET STAND
by Susan Marsh

Harried work day, mind ablaze.
Budget. Spreadsheets.
Eyes crossed over Power Point slides.
At last, escape.
Sun warms my back.
Feet pound the trail.
Lungs fill and life returns,
Limbs loosen.
It takes an hour.

I reach the secret stand: my aspens.
More truly, I am theirs.
One brain-frying afternoon, we met.
I saw their twisted trunks.
Heard a grouse drum. A bee’s drone.
A leaf rustle. I lay down.

The trees held me then,
Held me in green baskets.
Their twisted trunks made me smile.
They took me into their galleries of
Sweet breeze and sunshine.
I find them again today.
Could find them with my eyes closed:
Bees drone, grouse drums, home.

NOTE FROM THE AUTHOR: The first time I found this stand of aspens, not far from my house, was on a day when I was feeling sad, alone, and in desperate need of comfort. It felt as if the trees invited me to leave the trail and climb up a brushy slope to lie down in the dry grass beneath them. There I cried, felt sorry for myself, wrote in my journal, and took a nap. I dreamt I was, or maybe actually became, part of the aspen stand for a time, and when I stood up I nearly fell having forgotten what legs and feet were for—I had roots. Ever since, this stand has offered solace, and I go there often, mostly in a good mood these days. I have written about this stand in prose, but this was my first attempt at capturing what it means to me in a poem.

PHOTOGRAPH: “Aspen Trees” (Wyoming) by Susan Marsh.

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR: Susan Marsh is an award-winning writer living in Jackson, Wyoming. Her work has appeared in Orion, North American Review, and others. Her books include War Creek and A Hunger for High Country.

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This is the ocean I call Wyoming.
by Carrie Naughton

I can breathe in these waters,
these dry seabeds, this thundering dust
falling from the air, rising from the plains.
I know joy: in the rains
when the wind dreams in my hair,
when blue peaks huddle in moonlight,
when the sun drips shadows through cottonwoods
onto a trail beneath my feet.
Wyoming.

My littoral earth, I’ve come here to be born, or die.
These four straight lines cannot contain you.
I have seen your oilfires burning beside the dark highway
in between hallucinations and bullet-riddled roadsigns.
In my dreams, I am lost in a great sage desert of bones,
and the nodding pumpjacks battle dinosaurs
beneath a red sun, in a red sea,
Rawlins red warpaint on my pale face.
El Signor and Lost Soldier and Washakie run beside me.

I am eating a heart, the heart of Wyoming,
still pounding in the Craton, the Mowry Shale,
the Frontier Sandstone.
In my grasping hands, it beats to fine powder, and
sifting from my fingers,
returns to the waiting deeps of sky.

NOTE FROM THE AUTHOR: This poem was written in 1996, the year I first moved to Wyoming. I was 22 years old. Although I have lived near the Tetons intermittently since then, in January of 2015 I finally returned to stay forever. Bliss.

IMAGE: “Teton Drama” (Grand Teton National Park, Wyoming) by Andrew Soundarajan.

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR: Carrie Naughton is a freelance bookkeeper who writes speculative fiction, environmental essays, and poetry. Her work can be read at freezeframefiction, Luna Station Quarterly, and Slink Chunk Press, with poems forthcoming in NonBinary Review and Star*Line. Find her at carrienaughton.com — where she blogs frequently about whatever captures her interest.

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“Eventually, all things merge into one, and a river runs through it. The river was cut by the world’s great flood and runs over rocks from the basement of time. On some of the rocks are timeless raindrops. Under the rocks are the words, and some of the words are theirs. I am haunted by waters.”

 NORMAN MACLEAN, A River Runs Through It and Other Stories

PHOTO: “The Tetons and the Snake River” (1942), Grand Teton National Park, Wyoming, by Ansel Adams. National Archives and Records Administration, Records of the National Park Service. (79-AAG-1)

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“Eventually, all things merge into one, and a river runs through it. The river was cut by the world’s great flood and runs over rocks from the basement of time. On some of the rocks are timeless raindrops. Under the rocks are the words, and some of the words are theirs. I am haunted by waters.”  NORMAN MACLEAN, A River Runs Through It and Other Stories

PHOTO: “The Tetons and the Snake River” (1942), Grand Teton National Park, Wyoming, by Ansel Adams. National Archives and Records Administration, Records of the National Park Service. (79-AAG-1)

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I recently visited the website of Adam Jahiel, and enjoyed reviewing the breathtaking photos from his book The Last Cowboy.

During the past two decades, Jahiel shot the photographs as he spent months at a time living among the men who live on the range. In a recent Huffington Post article, Jahiel remarked, “It is a culture that has dwindled and almost disappeared through the years right in front of my camera.”

The Last Cowboy — 158 pages in hardcover or softcover — is available at blurb.com.

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