Boundaries

In takes me an hour to lose the road, to feel

the forest. I hop across small tributaries,

dark bog and leaves, the tang of sleeping pills

on my tongue. I’m relearning by body –

boundaries boundaries boundaries – a word

Eileen kept saying twenty years ago,

fresh from a course in life-coaching, a bird

with one note. I never knew how to say no.

Boundaries? today I ask the trees,

who look back, silent. But the air from these woods

is new in my lungs. And walking is a kindness.

I could no more have said no back then than the deer

could have threaded the fence that holds them here

Or the trees say no to these tightening roads.

© Hannah Lowe - the poetry review (issue 113)

Hannah Lowe

London-based poet, memoirist and critic. Named a Poetry Book Society Next Generation Poet in 2014. Her latest poetry collection is The Kids won the Costa Book of the Year, 2021. Reader in Creative Writing at Brunel University. Likes to retreat in the bath with a book, or meditate.

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