Walking in the Forest

Sophia Qin 

I

Pretending to be free of worries 

Doubting beginnings and endings 

The sky I flew over is full of clouds 

The city I landed in belongs to the Celts 

I am only deeply fond Of the forest at the edge of the city

Carrying my name with me 

Cubes with distinct edges collide, making a clanging sound 

But the North American mole and the torch pine 

Do not understand the language from the other side of the Earth 

Wipe off the yellow dust from the surface of the square characters 

Mix with rainwater and tears

 Pour it on the land of the forest 

The seeds have long been dormant 

When will they break through the soil?

Straighten out the twenty-eight strokes one by one 

Break off the beech branch Ignoring its smooth skin 

Borrow the salty Latin letters Force them into shape 

Twisting out a strange name

Pinecones paired with branches 

Curves entwine with lines 

Dreams confuse reality 

Creating my new mask

I fall to the base of a tree 

Staring at it face to face

A squirrel hops over

 Clearly not eyeing the food on the ground It stares at me blankly 

What is it really trying to tell me?

II

Countless times walking in this forest 

Exchanging secrets with the pine trees 

They are sharp enough 

But seal their lips with wax, keeping silent 

Sometimes chasing with the white-tailed deer 

He suddenly sprints away 

Leaving four hoof prints 

Mocking me for missing two

Bluebells raise their purple little faces 

Saying they can only love one person for life 

And will never reveal 

To continue reading the entire story, please visit the website: https://caal-ma.org/immigrationstories

Who that person really is

Sometimes the wild wind conspires with the blizzard 

Hiding all the secrets of the forest I dig out the past from my chest ——Spread it out on the snow

 Shouting at the forest Come, let’s compare 

And see who is more void

The forest remains silent Bringing a leaf to my face 

The leaf of the black oak is torn into seven pieces 

Each crack sprouts sharp serrated teeth

Are these the generous weapons of fate 

To resist time and nothingness? 

Yet this is clearly a conspiracy 

The black oak’s life is only a mere hundred years


EpilogueWhen I first arrived in the United States, my favorite place was the forest on the edge of Laizhen city. At that time, according to local custom, I took an English name. New friends, students of different ages and races at the language school, members of the PTA at my child’s school, all got used to calling me by my English name. However, when I walked alone in the forest, I often asked myself: Who is Sophia? My son’s favorite cartoon when he was young was “Ice Age”. I watched it with him over and over again, and I was deeply impressed by the pinecone that appeared at the beginning of the film. That autumn, while running in the forest, something hard underfoot stopped me. I squatted down to check and found it was that long-lost pinecone. My surprise was like meeting an old friend in a foreign land, but I quickly laughed at myself: This is indeed my foreign land, but for the pinecone, it is its homeland. Meeting an old friend in a foreign place, how could I not be interested in its past and present? After some searching, I found out: Its mother tree’s English name is black oak, and its Chinese name is 黑栎树 (black oak). Oak is just oak, though black oak belongs to the beech family, translating its English name directly as 黑橡树 (black oak) is also acceptable. In short, this fruit can be called an acorn, but it shouldn’t be called a pinecone. I toyed with that “pinecone”, looking up at the black oak, seeing how it soared into the clouds, thinking it should live as long as the ginkgo trees in my homeland, for thousands of years. However, despite the black oak reaching thirty meters tall, its lifespan is like that of humans, only a mere hundred years. The world is indeed absurd: what you see may not be the truth; what you call may not be the true name; and what you think may be entirely wrong. Many things in this world are merely misnomers passed on from one to another.