The Richter Scale
By Danielle Kopp
He is an artist,
always has been.
He can't help it,
he was born that way.
Behind his eyes are many more
than twenty five years.
An old soul.
It took him a record of four times
to pass college Algebra.
Yet, the Dalai Lama found him
WORTHY
enough to document his life.
Odd jobs, ideas, cameras, film, editing -
his is a world of constant change,
collaboration and sleepless nights.
A champion insomniac;
he doesn't mind the dark.
Settling down is something he's trying,
but years of friendship
gives me the ability to see
the way he longs for his travels.
For it is when he is wandering
the most unfamiliar of places
that he feels the most at home.
Long Days
No Showers
New Languages
Followed by the hundreds of postcards I used to receive.
Postcards that have become his footprints around the world,
proof that he was there.
One year, on my birthday, he call me from Tibet.
A true friend, we're inexplicably connected by our souls.
Once he wrote to me:
Two trains run parallel, each on its own track,
but always keeping the same time.
Suddenly, they come to a fork
and are separated by a thick forest.
For hundreds and hundreds of miles,
they do not see each other.
But when the forest clears,
both trains are there,
always keeping the same time.
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