No path here.
Just damp earth,
moss on stone,
and the slow, deliberate hush
of growing things.
Tree ferns arc overhead,
fronds wide as arms,
filtering light
into something sacred.
I brought my sons here,
when their legs were small
and full of mud.
They squatted in the black soil,
drew patterns with sticks,
found joy
in a single wriggling earthworm.
The ferns, the filtered light—
none of it mattered.
Only dirt,
and the way it stuck
to their knees,
their laughter,
my heart.
Now I pass alone.
The moss is thicker.
Their prints long gone.
But I see them—
the shape they made
in that moment,
still held
in the hush beneath the fronds.
And I smile,
because some things—
mud,
love,
the wonder of being their dad—
cling forever.
Ryan Stone
This one is from my new poetry collection – Love, and Other Ordinary Miracles – soon to be released on Amazon.

So fine!
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😊 why, thank you
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Wonderfully nostalgic …
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