The Quiet Country

 


What the Country Knows

The hills do not hurry toward anything.
They have been here through every version of the dark
and they will be here after,
patient as the names of things.

I am learning to want what is already here —
the crow's opinion of the morning,
the particular cold that comes before the snow decides,
the kitchen window holding the last of the light.

There is a life inside the slowing down
that the noise was always covering.
I find it in the ordinary hour,
in the soup, in the stillness, in the dark that asks nothing.



artwork and poetry ©Stacy Stephens

The Night Butterflies


The Night Butterflies

They come when the dark has settled into itself,
when the porch light makes its small confession to the air —
pale wings that seem to materialize from nothing,
from the nothing that was always full of them.

I watch from the threshold, neither in nor out,
the way I have always lived my truest life —
at edges, in the hinge of things,
where the known world softens into question.

They do not know they are beautiful.
That is the whole of their grace.
They navigate by light they did not choose,
and somehow, so do I.


artwork and poetry ©Stacy Stephens

The Friendship Bridge

 


What We Were to Each Other

We did not know we were happy —
happiness was just the air that summer,
the way she knew which apple to choose
and I knew where the creek went quiet.

There was a language we spoke only then,
made of glances, of running, of the particular
afternoon that belonged entirely to us
and asked nothing of us but to stay.

I have looked for her in every friendship since —
that easy, wordless knowing.
The way she said my name
like it was something she had found and kept.

We grew, as children do, in different directions.
But somewhere in me she is still waiting
at the edge of the yard, in the gold light,
patient as a thing that was always true.


artwork and poetry ©Stacy Stephens

Sweet Garden Days

 


What the Garden Knows

I have not done enough with soil and seed,
but the garden does not wait for my readiness.
It goes on greening at the edges of neglect,
pressing upward through whatever I have failed to tend.
There is a lesson here I keep receiving —
that growing is not an act of will
but of surrender.
The seed does not strive.
It simply trusts the dark,
and opens anyway.


artwork and poetry ©Stacy Stephens

Song of the Frog

 


The Frog Sings at the Edge of Everything

There is a frog somewhere in the dark
doing what the dark requires of him —
singing without apology,
without an audience in mind.

I hear him through the open window,
that ancient, muddy liturgy,
rising from whatever wet and secret place
he has claimed as his cathedral.

He does not wonder if the night is listening.
He does not save his song
for a better season,
a more receptive sky.

He sings because the water is near
and the air has changed
and something older than intention
moves through him like a current.

I have been learning this.

To let what lives in me
come forward without permission.
To stop waiting for the proper light,
the perfect stillness,
the world arranged just so.

The frog knows what I keep forgetting —
that the marsh does not need to be beautiful
to deserve a song.
That the night does not need to answer
for the singing to be real.

I sit with my cooling coffee
and the window open to April,
and he goes on, indifferent to me,
faithful to something I cannot name
but recognize the way you recognize
a word in your own language
spoken by a stranger.

This is the church I keep returning to.
No walls. No doctrine.
Only the frog at the edge of everything,
saying I am here, I am here, I am here
until the morning makes him quiet.

And even then, he has said enough.

Written in the small hours, with the window open.


artwork and poetry ©Stacy Stephens

On Wanting Less

 March, early morning


The house is quiet in the way it only gets past midnight, when the world outside has finally stopped its reaching and gone still. I've been sitting with my coffee — plain, from my own kitchen, in a mug I've held a hundred times — and thinking about life. Not in the anxious, churning way I sometimes do, but slowly. Deliberately. The way you turn a stone over in your hand just to feel the weight of it.

I've been thinking about the way I move through the world. My presence in it. The mark I leave behind — not in the meaningful sense, the legacy sense — but literally. What I take. What I consume. What I leave in my wake like a trail of small, unnecessary things.

I want to want less.

Not in the resigned way, not the hollow acceptance of someone who has simply stopped hoping. I want to be filled by less. To look at a simple thing — the slant of late light on the kitchen floor, a frayed sweater I've worn for years, a cup of coffee made with my own hands — and find it genuinely sufficient. Not merely enough. Enough has a thinness to it. I want abundance through simplicity, which I know sounds like a contradiction, but I think it is instead a kind of secret.

Less stuff means less weight. Less to keep up with, less to pay for, less to wish for in the blue hours of the night when wanting sneaks in through the cracks. I don't want my life to be measured in accumulations — piles of things that seemed important at the time of purchasing, that crowd corners and closets and the quiet edges of the mind. I want open space. I want room to breathe.

I know my work lives largely in a screen. My art, my words, my making — all of it travels through light and circuit and code. I don't apologize for that. But there is a wanting in me, deep and persistent, to also be of the earth. To touch it. To press my feet against the ground and remember that I am animal as much as I am artist, that I belong to something older and slower than any interface. The screen is where I make things. The earth is where I remember why.

I've left social media behind, and I don't miss it the way I thought I would. What I miss — if I'm honest — was never really there. I was looking for something true in a place that had very little truth to offer. Not because people are dishonest, but because the architecture of it rewards performance over presence. I would scroll and feel smaller rather than larger. Noisier inside rather than quieter. And the noise was the problem all along.

The blog is different. It is mine in the way a room of one's own is mine — not rented, not beholden to any algorithm's appetite. No one is deciding for me what I should see or want or buy. I decide what goes on the page, and I decide what I let in. That kind of sovereignty is not small. It is, in fact, enormous.

There is something in that choice — to curate my own inner life rather than outsourcing it to a feed — that feels continuous with all the rest of this wanting-less. Less noise. Less consumerism dressed as connection. Less scrolling past the lives of strangers who are also, quietly, scrolling past mine. More just being. More sitting with what is already here.

I want simple things. Food I've cooked myself, even if it's imperfect. That frayed sweater that knows the shape of me. Books. Films watched in the dark with my wife, in the particular peace of our own home. A few deep friendships that hold. I have never been built for glamour or accumulation. I have never wanted to keep up any appearance that wasn't genuinely mine. Maybe I am, at my most essential, a simpleton — and I mean that as a compliment I am finally ready to give myself.

I want to learn to inhabit myself more fully. To go forth in who I actually am, not who I might be convinced to perform. To carry less and feel more. To need only what is real.

The coffee is cooling now. The house is still quiet. And I find, sitting here in the small and sufficient circle of lamplight, that this — just this — is quite a lot.

This is my Garden

 


The Garden Kept Her Secrets

She crouched among the tomato vines
the way children do — completely,
her whole self given over to the dirt.

Something moved beneath a leaf.
She did not name it, only watched,
already learning that attention is a kind of love.

The afternoon was endless, as they are
when you are small enough to live inside one.
She would not remember this.

But the garden would.

artwork and poetry ©Stacy Stephens