Ivy

I rescued a few branches of ivy from the wall where they had spent the winter playing dead.

A warm pot, a sunny windowsill, a few days of quiet attention — and from those brittle sticks, something green pushed through.

Alive.

I felt bad keeping them inside, so I moved them to the balcony to breathe some real air and real light. 

Then one night, I simply forgot to bring them in.

By morning, the spring rain had turned to snow. The temperature had gone under.

The new buds — those small, brave things — had blackened overnight.

But I wasn’t ready to give up on ivy. 

Not on a plant that had held fast through winters that would make this late frost blush.

Spring, as it does, found its way back. 

The world remembered green.

And the ivy — it came back too.

From ground that had been locked shut. 

From what I had written off. 

From what seemed, for all the world, like nothing at all.

Unnamed, unhurried, irrepressible — 

life came creeping back.

Hold on. 

Spring comes.

Whatever mystery moves through ivy 

moves through us as well.

Even in the seasons when we are nothing but bare sticks — 

hope is in there, somewhere, 

slow and stubborn, 

waiting to stir.

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