My little brother is graduated, and because his class his
relatively small (~100), every student gave a thank-you speech to his/her
parents during the ceremony. Because I was only there for my little brother, I
spent much of the time reading, but a couple of speeches dragged my attention
to the fore. One of the students approached the podium and started off with a
stutter. I was immediately yanked into the King's Speech movie, and the
heartbreaking tragedy of this student's inability to formulate his words.
W-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-w-would my p-p-p-p-p-p-p-parents p-p-p-p-p-p-pl-pl-please
s-s-s-s-stand?
Already I was bawling, and cheering him on with everything
in my heart.
Those are bravest who possess no courage at all. If you have
no fear, it's not bravery standing before a crowd and speaking. Only by moving
through the fear can you defeat it, beat it, and exhibit courage and the
tenacity that the King’s Speech expressed so eloquently. So many of the
students droned their speeches, or pitched high into a descending resonance
with each sentence, portraying an ennui that grinds at my bones. Are they
thanking anyone or going through the motions? And I don’t know their stories,
but this boy, with the courage of a saint, stood up and bore the pain of
stuttering through a two-sentence speech that took him his whole minute to
repeat, with all of the emotive outpouring and love that could be.
It filled me, and I was not even the target. It was no
wonder that he almost got a standing ovation for his speech, and high-fives
from his classmates. I hid my tears – I don’t even have the bravery for those,
sometimes.
Now my little brother is graduated; he’s growing up.
Already, he’s smarter than I, and I hope, by God’s grace, he’s not long in
becoming wiser.
Eventually, Olwen, the crowd dissipates, long in buildup and
quick in escape. These trees surround me in tens of thousands, sloping up and
beneath in countless disparity, and I know none of their names nor, even, the
touch of their high leaves. Not nameless, are they? Glance around with me, do
you see the endless they without names? The firs and the false cedar, the maple
and pine, the oak, birch, ash, and wisteria vines, the huckleberry, blackberry,
and the quaking aspen, the poplar and the elm – I walk below the boughs of
many, today, the big-leaf maple clawing its way through the unkempt
rhododendron, the keys of maples helicoptering from the tallest branches, the
battle for sunlight and its scarcity at the base of these mighty things.
Even the wind reaches me not among the forest and in the
valley, where the creek stumbles over pebbles towards the sea, though I suspect
not in its wildest dreams can it imagine such a thing, and the pines fill the
air with nostalgic mountain redolence. I can tell where I am simply by smelling
the leaves and watching the lichen and moss clinging desperately to the limbs
of giants, and the trunks of forest legs.
My bare feet quietly skip over sticks and stones and soon
carry the color of mud along with me, and the doe recognizes the fae in my
soles. I sit in the branches of old-man willow and tarry long in the arms of
the burly oak, whose palm stretches out with mighty piano fingers, and tickle
the harp strings of the sun, making musical notes of the mountain morning,
mournful and full of love.
I don’t think I could ever leave these shores, the pacific
northwest lives in me, and I in thee.
http://benjaminwblog.com/2014/06/graduation/
https://twitter.com/benjaminwynsma
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