My Past

My past is like foreign countries

In the cartography of my mind

Each visited and explored

alone in some group tour.

There are no stamps

in my passport,

no visas, no signs

of entry or departure,

but my past is full

of stays in those distant places

remembered incompletely well.

I spent time in them

as a child, slowly rushing;

through the joy of discovery;

In the turmoil of adolescence

grasping for independence;

and with purpose and conviction as a young man.

And though those journeys

are increasingly remote,

and beyond imagination

I am certain I was there,

even in the absence of proof.

The experience of those travels

serve as the foundation and,

faintly a light, for my path

as I venture toward

a somehow familiar

yet very foreign land.

Looking backward into the mirror

to see what lies ahead

I confess to colouring those memories –

snatches of film, fading photographs –

from a palette that matches my mood,

shading them to fit my fears,

sometimes my dreams.

What have I learned,

have I learned?,

from those years in now foreign lands.

Will those lessons prepare me for

where I wake tomorrow

or leave me fearful to open my eyes.

Trust and anticipation,

helplessness and fear.

What has stayed true?

What has remained constant?

The hope of arriving home.

The need to love and find love.

The sure knowledge

that peace will come

at journey’s end.

The choice of joy

at finding light.