0c231335-5ac6-469f-b3e6-1405aa8f6ce0_1024x576

I am the only one alone on this train,
watching families cluster, friends laugh.
Mile Post Seventy-Two slides past the window,
avalanche protection standing guard.


Morning haze from last night’s forest fire
scents the air like distant campfires.
I missed the bus downtown yesterday—
another small journey undertaken alone.


It seems like old times:
everyone else, and me.


Not lonely, not ecstatic, just present in the space between.


The inland arms of Alaska stretch
like reaching hands I cannot grasp.
Turnagain’s tides rise forty feet,
surfers in dry suits riding the tsunami.


Two thousand moose roam unseen,
inhabiting the vast wilderness.
Are they ever lonely, I wonder,
or simply content in solitude?


Those with family and friends seem happier—
or do they simply seem so from a distance?


Green and green and white
and grey and grey and brown.
The colors blur together
as the train moves forward,
carrying me alone.

Link to original article