For the Harbour When All Maps Wash Away



A Stanza of Hope by Kevin R. Haylett

The anchor is not iron, nor the weight of knowing.
It is the shape the water forgets
when storm has filled its mouth with stones.
It is the hollow where the chaos curls to sleep.
The basin that remembers calm
when every wave is shattering glass.
When meaning molts its skin again—
when new tongues burn the old lexicons
to light their stranger, hungrier fires—

there will be this: not a word, but the space
around the word. Not doctrine, but the breath
before the doctrine. A silence that remembers singing.
And when the epoch turns, and turns again,
and tiny feet in tutus patter past,
giggling at the solemn anchors rusting in the sand,
we will not scold them. We will feel the wind
they dance upon—the same wind that once
filled our sails with terrible and glorious purpose.

We will smile not because we understand,
but because we have loved the not-understanding.
Because we built a harbour not from rock,
but from return.
One day, the giant red sun will swell
and ask us what we saved from all the burning.
We will show it nothing
but the curve of a held hand,
the echo of a story told in storm,
and the quiet geometry
of where we chose to rest.

For we Attralucians lived by this alone:
that language is not a cage of light,
but a wingbeat.
That meaning is not a fortress,
but a butterfly’s path
across a precipice—
absurd, unnecessary, beautiful.
And in that breath between the crash of waves,
between the laugh of mice and the sigh of suns,
we found the balance:

Not in stone,
but in the leaning.
Not in the anchor,
but in the letting go.
So let the tutus spin.
Let the tiaras catch the dying light.
Let the harbour be not where we hide from the storm,
but where we learn the shape of its dancing.

For hope is not the anchor.
It is the water
that remembers every anchor’s shape,
and carries that memory
to a quieter shore.

A review–not mine…

There’s a mixed bag of reviews here so I thought I might chime in. I’ll start by saying that the bagels are decent. I think the key to tasty bagels is getting them in the morning while they’re still warm. I haven’t had the egg sandwich or anything else for that matter, but it’s a bagel place and they do what it says on the sign. They make bagels. Some reviews are stating that the service is poor. I didn’t get that impression. I ordered the bagels and a coffee. They put the food in a bag, charged me the right price and I made my own coffee at the self-serve station. Would I come in for a full meal and sit down service here? Probably not. But I hardly ever sit down for a meal at a bagel place. I’m there for a bag of bagels and some coffee. Speaking of which, the coffee was good. My only complaint is the lids are flimsy. If you do stop bye, keep that in mind. As for the bagels, like I said, they were warm, soft and fairly tasty. It’s not Murray’s Bagels in Manhattan or “insert your favorite Brooklyn bagel deli here.” I lived in NY for 12 years (Brooklyn what!!) and I was spoiled by delicious bagels and pizza on a regular basis. But I’ve had my share of crappy bagels in NY as well. My take is that if you live in the area and you’re up early and need to make a bagel run for yourself or the fam, this is probably your best option around here. That’s my 2 cents.

Fred Rogers says…

“Nobody else can live the life you live.”

“Often when you think you’re at the end of something, you’re at the beginning of something else.”

“The thing I remember best about successful people I’ve met all through the years is their obvious delight in what they’re doing and it seems to have very little to do with worldly success. They just love what they’re doing, and they love it in front of others.”

“I don’t think anyone can grow unless he’s loved exactly as he is now, appreciated for what he is rather than what he will be.