Married five decades
Just as happy now as then
How do they do that?
Growing old together
Love’s mysteries discovered
Blessed marriage
24 Poems ~ 24 Hours
Married five decades
Just as happy now as then
How do they do that?
Growing old together
Love’s mysteries discovered
Blessed marriage
Shisa took me for a walk today.
I hadn’t planned a walk;
I had other, more productive ideas:
pull the weeds, spread the mulch.
Shisa doesn’t get that many walks anymore.
She has worn her arthritic hips out
with the many glorious walks she has taken
in her long and good life.
So when she started up the driveway
and looked back at me askance
(she would never go alone)
I had to follow.
Down the hill to the cul-de-sac,
sniffing this, peeing on that,
rolling in a neighbor’s new-cut grass.
Regular dog stuff.
Wonderful dogly delights.
She showed me where someone had
pushed the forest back on a vacant lot,
how you can see where the bank goes down to the creek,
where there are smells and sights she’d love to explore,
but it’s too steep, so she sniffs at the edges
and we go on our way.
She showed me where the car lives
that hit Calvin,
but we do not tarry long in front of that house.
She showed me the new brick-lined flowerbed
someone has just put around their mailbox
to keep the mail truck from killing the grass there.
She showed me that I can pull that hill now
better than I could when we first moved here,
seven springs ago.
She showed me how good our new black fence will look
when it is finished when you come up that hill.
She seems to like that fence.
Not for long, I suspect.
She showed me that the opportunity for a nice walk
on a beautiful June morning
before the heat sets in
is a foolish thing to waste
and that the weeds will still need pulling
tomorrow when maybe her hips
won’t even let her think about a walk.
I can hear my sister asking, “Did you take Shisa for a walk today?”
No.
Shisa took me.
She looked up from her knitting
at her daughter across the room,
sprawled on the carpet
reading a hardback copy
of “The Nail in the Oak Tree.”
She took a sip from her wine glass
on the table next to her and popped
a cracker and a cube of extra-sharp cheddar cheese
into her mouth.
She stood.
“I’m going out to water the sunflower bed.
Wanna come? It’s pretty out.”
“Sure.” The girl marked her page
and slid her book into her satchel.
Outside, they stood on the driveway pavement
and discussed whether there was space
in this flower bed to add some zinnias,
or should they go in the bed on the other side of the yard.
Arms around each other,
they spent several amiable minutes
admiring the garden, the fireflies,
and the moon-filled night.
Their last evening together.
Rambling in an unfamiliar wood,
I happened upon a young man sitting at a piano.
He did not look up as I approached.
He did not speak in response to my greeting.
He was not real, or at least not alive.
He and his piano had been there for a long, long time.
His instrument was half rotted away, leaf-covered, silent.
He appeared a plastic mannequin, weathered and pale.
What happenstance had placed them in this unlikely setting?
I pondered this as I sat on a nearby stump and ate my hiker’s lunch.
I decided I’d keep them company while I rested for a bit.
I said, “It’s very nice to make your acquaintance, sir.”
He didn’t answer.
“You live in a lovely wood.”
No reply.
He remained mute when I asked how long he’d been there.
I chattered on.
He made no comment to any of my remarks.
In an hour, I stood to leave. I doffed my baseball cap
and told him I’d enjoyed spending time with him,
and turned to leave.
As I walked away, I heard music.
Pick a place.
Anywhere on this planet.
You’ll likely find chaos.
Suffering. Pain. Cruelty.
Oppression. Greed.
Humans can be a pretty despicable bunch.
Have we even yet seen the extent of
man’s talent for debauchery?
I fear not.
Sometimes it’s overwhelming.
We wake up not knowing what atrocity
will be the Breaking News this morning.
Catastrophes. War. Disasters. Famine.
Some say it’s always been this way;
we just know more.
I disagree.
There’s always been evil, yes;
but the creativity of man has led to
ever more inventive methods of
exploitation and abuse.
We are a creative lot.
But I have an antidote to the despair and misery,
for those who need relief.
Nature.
Find a forest
or even a single beautiful, growing thing.
Outside is best, but inside works, too.
Sit with it.
Breathe it.
Be with it.
For while we humans often behave destructively,
nature seldom does.
And the hearts of good people
can take only so much of witnessing profanity.
We need a solace.
Dr. Me prescribes sunshine, flowers,
the wind playing in your hair,
bare feet on good earth.
Ice cream cones, clear water,
walking in showers, playing in the sea,
a brilliant red tree in a field of gloriously purple lavender.
The fresh new smell of fresh new babies:
human, puppies, kittens, chicks, goats.
Most any baby will work.
Remind yourself that this Earth still has beauty,
still has goodness,
still has joy.
You mustn’t look only at the ugly things.
Save yourself from despair with Nature.
“Whose woods these are I think I know,”
You can’t really own us, though.
You tell yourselves, “Those trees are ours,”
but no one owns the leafy bowers
or fragrant flowers.
We gracious beings share your lives;
You count us up by tens and fives.
You think you’re clever, rich, and smart.
You’re big on brains, but not on heart.
Please do your part.
There is no life without our work.
We do it well and never shirk.
We give you breath and life and air
and nest small creatures in our hair.
Yet you don’t care.
You cut us down and break our hearts
and haul us off on rolling carts.
You simply do not understand
that Earth is dying by your hand.
You rape the land.
We’ll continue to do our bit,
even though you don’t recognize it.
We have a job—a job we’ll do
long, long after humanity’s through.
There’ll be no You.
Then Earth will start to make repair
and hope we never have to share
this planet with mankind ever again
once we erase your selfish stain.
We will remain.
(The first line is from Robert Frost’s “Stopping By Woods on a Snowy Evening”; I have also followed a similar rhyme scheme.).
Float Tank
I am floating in the dark,
incapable of sinking.
I almost think I like this.
Water has never really felt like a friend to me —
bodies of water, that is.
Water in a glass has been a mentor, a
therapist, a best friend.
Bodies of water – even the shower,
the tub – have sometimes felt like a threat.
I remember being in a boat –
all of us, with our most fun uncle –
on the St. Johns River,
before good sense dictated life vests,
and before any of us could swim.
Dusk came on.
My dad and his brother laughing at the alligator
bumping the bottom of the boat
while the outboard motor stalled again.
My mother’s terrified face set in a grim, angry line.
I was six; I took my cues from her.
If she was afraid, I should be, too.
But this, this floating in the dark,
Incapable of sinking,
this is different.
I feel safe.
I feel nurtured.
I feel calm.
This. Is. Safe.
I am separate from the world, floating in time and space.
There is nothing here but me.
This is a meditation.
There is nothing to see.
Nothing to hear.
Me, without the world.
The world is still out there,
but it is not in here.
I, only I, am in here.
I am so excited to get started tomorrow! I’ve done the half marathon twice, but I was not able to participate last year. Several of the poems I’ve written during previous marathons, after revision and more work, have been published! I’ve cleared my schedule and stocked up on snackies. See you all tomorrow!!
Gena
Some things are tiny and mighty.
A sore pinky toe
The rudder of a ship
A termite’s teeth
The rudder of a ship
A cotter pin
A paper cut
A dust mote in your eye
The point of a needle
A spark from a cigarette tossed onto dry leaves
The egg of an ant
The birth of an idea
Tiny isn’t powerless.
Tiny can be mighty.
Size, it appears,
is not as important
as some people think.
There is a place – at least I’ve heard it’s real
where everyone is free to feel
that Life is good.
Where everybody has enough
of clothes and food and other stuff
and Life is good.
Where fair is fair and right is right
and quarrels are settled by reason, not might
and Life is good.
Of course there are problems, but people don’t hate,
and there is much to appreciate
and Life is good.
Where is this place? I’d like to know.
If I knew, you and I would go
where Life is good.