She stoops to touch a crab,
the life gone out of it,
turns the shell in the sand,
in a gentle voice asks,
Isn't God's work amazing?
Her face shining clear as glass.
The splendor of the ocean
and what spills out of it stirs her
just as it stirs me.
I wish you knew God loves you.
She says this kindly, knowing my grievances:
Life’s cruelty, its utter futility,
the extreme mystery the God she
loves insists on.
But why spoil her moment
with my unease?
She only wants to share this thing
that’s changed her life.
And yet I must complain, not gently.
Life just stumbles along on its own,
merely rises up from nature’s patterns,
and one day will vanish.
She lifts her face to the clouds.
Utters not a word.
But I can tell she’s praying for me.
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