A curated webspace for Poetry, Politics, and Nature with over 10,000 daily visitors and over 9,000 archived posts.
There are so many ways to hold and be held.
—James Crews, “The World Loves You Back”
Assume belonging.
—Augusta Kantra
.
There are so many ways to hold and be held.
Like the way the white and black cat holds my lap
even as I hold her small weight.
Like the way a woman holds a canyon in her heart—
its red rock cliffs and snow-thick spruce—
even as the canyon holds her.
And when I hold silence and offer it my whole attention,
I feel how silence holds me,
cradles me with such profound nothing
it becomes everything.
What if we assume we belong?
Then we might find we are held
by strands of birdsong, by the even beat
of eagle’s wings, by the blue moonlight
that reflects off the snow.
I spent so much time worrying
about how to fit in, changing
how I dressed, how I spoke, what I did.
I somehow didn’t learn until recently
real belonging asks nothing of me
except I offer myself exactly as I am.
I become more myself when I trust I am held
as much by shadow as by light,
held by the one shared breath, by the one
infinite song, held by soil, held by sky,
held even by the human longing to be held,
held by the one great story
from which our lives cannot be unwritten.
Copyright 2025 Rosemerry Wahtola Trommer

Rosemerry Wahtola Trommer is a teacher, poet and story teller whose many books include The Unfolding. She lives with her husband and daughter in Placerville, Colorado, on the banks of the wild and undammed San Miguel River.
Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.
Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.
“I become more myself when I trust I am held
as much by shadow as by light”
Another exquisite poem, Rosemerry!
LikeLike
Yet another of Rosemerry’s stunning poems to carry in my heart. ‘To offer myself exactly as I am’ and be held ‘as much by shadow as by light’ – this is my life’s work. So grateful to you Rosemerry for putting this into poetry and to you Michael for sharing it with us. xoxo
LikeLike
Well-said, Jan. I feel much the same way about Rosemerry’s work.
>
LikeLike
Thank you for all your poems. There are so many that have helped me process my grief. I am blessed in having been introduced to your work.
LikeLike
A dear poem that holds so much. ✨🫶
Belonging is something so many of us spend our lives trying to find. Hjemve is a danish word that means home-grief, home-anguish, home-sickness where we long for what we miss but often for ‘places’ we’ve not even had or experienced. It’s a primary reason I’ve often yearned, since a child, to be another species, usually a raptor, on this planet.
LikeLike
Thanks, Renee. I’ve often dreamed of being a hawk. Perhaps it is my spirit animal.
>
LikeLike
For many years I have lived in nature and embraced its gentle, consoling force, and Rosemerry’s poem has opened a new and beautiful spiritual connection that I can hold intimately, and that can hold me the same. The power of poetry never ceases to amaze me.
LikeLike
Thanks, Marc. Well-said.
>
LikeLike
Thank you, Michael for all you do every sngle day! ❤️
LikeLike
Thanks, Donna!
>
LikeLike
Dear Rosemerry you are holding so many now. Thank you, love you.
LikeLike
I just crawled out of bed (where I am hiding with a cold of cosmic proportions) and tried to read the most important emails I had missed. When I saw Rosemerry’s poem in the VOX POPULI list, I couldn’t resist. And, of course, it’s another thing of beauty. It IS indeed a gift. This poem gave me a lift and told me not to despair. I’ll be held. We’ll all be held.
LikeLiked by 3 people
Yes, we are held!
>
LikeLike
Oh wishing you ease in your body, even as you heal from the cosmic cold!!!
LikeLike
Me, too. No covid ( at least out of date test says no covid) but rotten cold. Had to miss appt with surgeon today so everything will be put off.
LikeLike
Thank you for this poem. This is a gift. This is a kindness. Here is Goodness. Here is Beauty. Here is Excellence. This is doing what that crow in the hemlock tree does – giving my heart a change of mood.
LikeLiked by 3 people
Thanks, Owen.
>
LikeLiked by 1 person
Thank you, Owen–and I love this image of the crow in the hemlock!
LikeLiked by 1 person
OK, then let me reiterate my gratitude for this poetic work and that reading this poem was like climbing a ladder and balancing on each rung all the way up and while I climbed the crow in the hemlock tree came to visit from Robert Frost’s A Dust of Snow poem and as I climbed I couldn’t help remembering Goethe’s aphorism that’s like: A person finds in the world what they have in their heart. So Thank you, Rosemerry.
LikeLiked by 2 people
ohmygosh, now I am smiling even wider. Thank you, Owen. ❤️
LikeLike
Sometimes a poem cracks me open and I can finally cry.
LikeLiked by 2 people
And then Rosemerry’s poem can console and hold you.
LikeLiked by 2 people
❤️❤️
LikeLiked by 2 people
Oh Barbara, me, too!!!
LikeLiked by 1 person
❤️😥
LikeLike
How I also love this poem — Rosemerry’s tone so ardently humble. And how I, as a reader, feel welcomed into this poem. I am certain that many, many of us can relate to:
“I spent so much time worrying
about how to fit in, changing
how I dressed, how I spoke, what I did.
I somehow didn’t learn until recently
real belonging asks nothing of me
except I offer myself exactly as I am. “
…yet I have been unable to express this so clearly! Thank you, dear Rosemerry — & Michael!
LikeLiked by 3 people
I love those lines as well. Thank you, Laure-Anne.
>
LikeLiked by 1 person
Amazing you, oh how hard it can be to say the simplest things. I love the way you do it, too ❤️
LikeLike
What a stunning poem. I really love this one. Thank you.
LikeLiked by 2 people
Thank you, Michelle!
>
LikeLiked by 1 person
Thank you, Michelle!
LikeLike
Such paradoxical wisdom expressed with tenderness . . . where did the top of my head go? Into my heart . . .
LikeLiked by 2 people
Yes
>
LikeLiked by 1 person
Thank you for this sweet laughter … where did the top of my head go, indeed!
LikeLike
This poem belongs among the great ones of our time.
It’ll go above my kitchen counter to help greet each new day, joining Susan Kelly-DeWitt’s Psalm for Sunrise as anthems to incite joy, each holding us, helping us find a way.
LikeLiked by 3 people
Thanks, Jim. I agree. It’s a beautiful poem.
>
LikeLiked by 1 person
Thank you, Jim! I love that it will get to live in your kitchen, and in such fine company, too!
LikeLiked by 1 person