What Thaw Reclaims
Mountain ice breaks
free its frozen grip,
unspooling threads
from snow-capped peaks.
Winding down through aspen roots,
filling low places with living waters,
delivering warmth
to valleys still flinching from frost.
Each bend a soft shoulder to lean on.
Lakes lap in harmony with the birdsong.
Grass greens from rushing confession,
then pauses, listening for light.
Winter isn’t done;
cold will return.
But thaw reclaims
the frost.
Not all refrains come with trumpets.
Some sing quietly
like rippling water
refusing to freeze again.
Intentional Ambiguity
What Thaw Reclaims is built on intentional ambiguity. Is it a poem about spring? Renewal? Something quietly sacred? That depends on the reader.
Your challenge:
Write a poem that invites interpretation. Let your imagery carry multiple meanings—emotional, seasonal, spiritual, or something else entirely. Avoid explaining. Trust your symbols. Let the reader bring their lived experience to the page.
Don’t tell them what to see. Let them feel it.
Share your poem or a link to it in the comments. Let’s explore how different truths can emerge from the same lines.
