Tag Archives: forest

The Dream

by Ethel Mortenson Davis

In my dream
I was in a forest, just born.
(I was given a second chance.)

My old beginning
was an old skin,
discarded and left behind,
one covered with pain
and suffering,
one I had separated from
and left on the forest floor
behind me.

Here, I was born
into a loving family,
one who welcomed me
and esteemed me.

The she-wolf nurtured me
(animals take care of their young)
as I clung tight to her soft hair.
She spoke to me.
Her close-set eyes cautioned me.

“When you feel danger
leave that place.
You will always have danger
and enemies.

“If you are wounded
go back to your beginning.
And there in the quiet
and coolness you will heal.”

She taught me how to live.

“Take care of your reality
at hand. Take care
of your young first.”

She taught me how to die.

“Death is a passage
to another beginning.
Remember, there is always
hope.”

The soft winds of the forest
rocked me to sleep.
The evening primroses
caressed me with their sweet water.

My life was full,
And I was happy.

When I awoke
I knew I had begun again.

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From the Slopes of Grand Mesa

a photograph by Ethel Mortenson Davis

From the Slopes of Grand Mesa

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Medley of Spring

a photo essay by Sonja Bingen, our daughter

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Early Spring

a photograph by Sonja Bingen

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Waterfall

a photograph by Sonja Bingen

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Redwoods

by Sonja Bingen, our daughter

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Deer in The Forest

Photograph by Sonja Bingen, our daughter

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Evening in Continental Divide, NM

We have, over the life of fourwindowspress.com, presented poetry and essays about Continental Divide, New Mexico. It is a small place off Interstate 40 to the east of Gallup. The area has a variety of races and tribes, Navajo, Pueblo (especially Zuni and Acoma), Hispanics, people from the Middle East, and Anglos. The majority of the population are Native Americans. This photograph by Ethel Mortenson Davis is taken just on the other side of the fence around our house looking southwest–more west than south, at sunset. You can see the Zuni Mountains behind the rabbit brush, sagebrush, juniper, cedar, and piñon trees. There are about 360,000 acres of pristine wilderness in the Zuni Mountains. What you cannot see in the photograph are the elk, mule deer, jack rabbits, rattlesnakes, mountain lions, bobcats, lynx, black bears, grizzly bears, cattle, horses, coyotes, and dogs that sometimes make noises in the night that get our two wonderful dogs, Pax and Juneau, barking. This is only one angle from our house. The forest is thicker if you swing the camera lens just a little bit. From our second story you can see the red cliffs to the north and Mount Taylor, the area’s towering mountain rich in Navajo and Pueblo beliefs, to the east. We live in a wild, rural place that presents some challenges–we are sometimes without electricity or water for a day, but that also causes tourists to stop and get out their cameras.

Photograph by Ethel Mortenson Davis

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