Blueberries This morning I ate blueberries, tart and sweet slight grit, soft explosions in my mouth. I thought of my nephew, recently introduced to the pleasures of eating, now able to feed himself in fistfuls with those long fingers he folded beneath his chin the day he was born; I saw the Buddha in his hands. He seems to hold the secret of contentment in the world he inhabits; almost everything is cause for smiling, is reason to reach, point, look, explore with face and mouth and skin. When he eats blueberries, it is enough to fill his sweet body with such satisfaction his whole being radiates delight. He stretches a finger in my direction and I bend closer to receive his benediction, the blessing of his sticky touch.
Carole Greenfield grew up in Colombia and lives in Massachusetts. Her work has appeared in Red Dancefloor, Gulfstream, Women’s Words, Beltway Quarterly Review, and is forthcoming in Eunoia Review and Dodging the Rain.

The Lichen and the Rock
I took a thousand pictures of
lichen growing on rocks
wondering how they managed to
know to put that mint green next to
the gold
so enthralled I was by their art
I asked if I might join their tribe
being used to collaboration
they agreed to give it a try
(taking a peek no doubt at some
of the rocks in my mind)
It feels like joining a movement
being taught how to lichenise
this dissolving of certainties
seems never to come to an end
it is a surprise to find new
colours appearing in my mind
improvising
searching for the spaces between
alive and not alive carrying
strange bacteria as start ups
Lately I take gifts of coloured
glass to place amongst them to see
if they might do something they have
never done before to bring it
alive or sometimes I leave one
just to surprise as thanks for the
blessed living soil