Tuesday, October 1, 2013

Water

– Maji ni uhai –
Water, the nectar of life

October. Water is desire. The ground is inflamed, red-hot and dusty. Long cracks open along the beaten track. The sun dries out your thoughts. Not a drop since April. The bare thorny trees sting your throat. Your breath is dry, desolated like the land you tread on.
The wind blows away your sweat, leaving you long salty strips on the skin. A cat meows in the distance. The chicken gasp, looking for a bit of shadow.

You close your eyes, and see a spring. You dream to drink in. Fresh and clean water, that invites to be touched, tasted, swallowed. Beautifully blue.
You open your eyes and it only remains the red dust. A snake is stuck between the scalding stones. Headache, drought, and in the lungs more dust again.

And then, from nowhere, it appears a minuscule leaf. The Spring begins like that: with a minuscule leaf from nowhere. One can't see a cloud, but magic, the leaf extinguishes the thirst in a vision. Young and tender, it sends in the air its perfume of hope.

And here, that's another one! And another, and another again. They bud from the thorns. They are painting green the mountain. The Sky suggests to them that the season is about to change, so they celebrate. They use all last resources for shining and rejoicing to the imminent regeneration of the world. Their last energies in a rain dance.

It's a promise. Soon we'll have water again. Soon we'll have again life.

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