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The View From Here

Observations and Insights
on the Nature of Things


This monthly column features brief essays, poems, poetic micro essays and photography by Eve West Bessier, Poet Laureate Emerita of Silver City and Grant County, New Mexico. Look for a new post every first Friday.



Freshwater – Past – Continuity

There’s a freshwater lake
beneath
White Sands National Park.

Or perhaps,
it is ancient saline water
from the Cretaceous Era
when a sea flowed
into and created this basin.

There is continuity
from the prehistoric.

I have taken
three-hundred photos
from a plastic bin
containing random
Kodak packets
and placed the images
in chronological order

into a big red
orange album.

Sunrise.
Sunset.

Multiplied by
ten-thousand.

I can now see
that there is continuity
in my own flowing

from past stories
to present realities.

Freshwater
salinated
by generous tears.

A basin filled
with a myriad
memories flowing
hot and cold.

The good
and the sad
combined.

My own
subterranean
reservoir.

My own
anthropological
diary.


Photo credit: “Beneath the Surface,” Eve West Bessier, 2025

Disclaimer:
The views expressed here are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect those of the Southwest Word Fiesta™ or its steering committee.

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We respectfully acknowledge that the entirety of southwestern New Mexico is the traditional territory, since time immemorial, of the Chis-Nde, also known as the people of the Chiricahua Apache Nation. The Chiricahua Apache Nation is recognized as a sovereign Native Nation by the United States in the Treaty of Amity, Commerce, and Friendship of 1 July 1852 (10 Stat. 979) (Treaty of Santa Fe ratified 23 March 1853 and proclaimed by President Franklin Pierce 25 March 1853).

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