Soulcraft Musings
Today, January 20, 2017, we inaugurate Soulcraft Musings, a new offering from Animas Valley Institute (see below). This is the same day America inaugurates a new president, a cultural upheaval currently mobilizing thousands of response teams worldwide. On this day we commence our humble project of Soulcraft Musings in support of the deepening, diversification, and flourishing of all life. At this time in the world, may we all inaugurate actions and projects that collectively give birth to a life-enhancing society.

Friday, November 14, 2025
Across eras and places and people, this time of year is known for the veil being thin, for the connections between the visible and invisible realms being more palpable, for the honoring of those who have crossed over to be celebrated in community. This week’s selection aligns with all that the season invites into our awareness.
This particular poem makes vivid what the tender caring of our beloved elders might look like; how it is possible to heal, even after death. The poem shows us the slow process of transitioning into a new relationship, one where the whole village participates in making it possible for the elders to become blessed ancestors whispering their wisdom, where if the others feel their presence, they might just catch ‘whatever children need to know’.
The Elders
When by the fire at sundown the elders
No longer spoke, no longer
Shook their heads or reached for the food
Put down beside them, when their eyes stayed closed
Or open without blinking,
When they no longer saw or heard
What they were asked to understand, their children
Would cover them and let them lie
Close to the embers and would turn them over
Carefully and gently in the night
As they would have turned themselves
If they had been sleeping
And would let them rest there through the day
To be covered with leaves in rain,
To be dried by the sun
Like clothing newly washed in a spring,
And then would bring them to the fire again
At evening, to their accustomed places
As the warmth and light of the flames
Healed them, as the smoke healed them and the ashes
Smoothed across their faces, across their arms
And legs and over their whole bodies
Healed them slowly night after night and morning
And afternoon, till the bundles of their skin
Grew light around their bones, still lighter
Each time they were lifted
And carried through the forest to a new campfire,
Till even the youngest could lift them
Like those just born. Their eyes would be changed
To cowrie shells, to slits in a whiteness
Able to see more clearly into the sky
Even at night and far below the earth,
As far upstream as the source and as far
Downstream as the dark mouth of the Sepik River,
Till their spirits became large birds flying away,
Not into trees or into the clouds
But straight against the shoulder blades of their children
Where they would hold as tight against their spines
As if they had grown there, down-curved beaks
Firm along the tops of the living skulls
Of those grown children, where they would walk
And whisper whatever children need to know.
—David Wagoner
To read previous musings click here.