Running in the Garden of the Gods

There’s something so reassuring

About leaving my footfalls next to eternity

 

After a long day hunched over a computer

Having arguments that won’t matter in a week

About technology that will be obsolete in a year.

 

How expansive it feels, then, to be so small beneath

Scenery so indifferent.

 

Hogbacks red as God’s brick

Scattered at the foot of America’s Mountain

The Purple Mountain’s Majesty we’ve all heard so much tell about.

 

The Utes called it Tava

The Sun Mountain

 

The rocks don’t care what we call them.

They were here first.

They’ll be here last.

 

I move at a pace as tectonic as the geography.

One lumbering step at a time.

Doing  my decay management.

Huffing and puffing.

Fighting the ravages of time.

 

It’s a losing battle.

 

I have but an instant here

And the promontories I pace beneath

Won’t notice when I’m gone.

 

But it’s worth it.

The work has its own reward

 

And maybe good health can expand the blink of my existence

Give me a few more days

 

To wonder about the scale of things

Under a Western sky.