Discovering morning’s first light
The moon on the water is a pale eye. Benign, it hangs suspended, unmoving like a dream upon awakening. The lake bears it effortlessly and the scrim of trees along the skyline thrust up like fingers to tickle at its belly.
You swear you can hear the chuckle of it against the morning adagio of shorebirds.
This early in the day there is nothing to distract you from this delicate and deliberate joining to what is. The mountain across the lake is magnified by the clarity of the air and you almost feel you could touch it with an outstretched hand.



When I was a boy growing up in my home community of Attawapiskat on the James Bay coast, I was deathly afraid of looking at the full moon.
I grew up...
I’m happy to see the ongoing support and assistance in our northern remote communities to help our people cope with so many lifelong and generational issues...