Each star shines its way to Earth only to learn it has died. In this magical corner of our World, they slide down the fall instead, becoming one with the waters that reflect them.
24 Poems ~ 24 Hours
Each star shines its way to Earth only to learn it has died. In this magical corner of our World, they slide down the fall instead, becoming one with the waters that reflect them.
Patiently we wait and watch you Jan, as you step over your papers and books, piled neatly until they fall over. We are by the windows where you promised hours of meditation, windows opened after new summer rain has made way for sunshine. Candles with floral scents, soft purses with crayons and pens, greeting cards for faraway friends: We wait and watch you move through each day. Up so early yet wanting more sleep, you ignore your inviting pillow. We watch you worry and tumble into task after task. The phone rings even now, and you take on the new responsibility.
A Muse of Childhood
*Nestled in Downtown Kansas City, Arthur Kraft’s mosaic greeted all who visited the old library. The mosaic still remains even though this children’s library has long since closed. It continues to inspire many who loved it when growing up. I know, I am among those people. Every time I walk by the mosaic, my favorite moments are when the sun glances upon the tiles and they shimmer with glints of silver or gold.
A Muse of Childhood
Majestically, patiently, the Muse endures the storm’s fury,
guarding the children, animals, and performers of the mosaic
who hold gentle, lilting, laughing music within,
waiting to sing out in the bright sunshine.
Tan Ta Rah! Boom! Laughing bells ring in time to the drums!
Our Muse beckons the elephant to promenade first with a small, triumphant boy atop.
Her right arm sweeps up with the sun to welcome gleeful penguins and
hungry little chicks pecking and hatching in the grass.
The dust and mud on the tiles can’t hold them back.
Little girls skip in the brightness and dance with swaying flowers
while their brother scales higher, higher, and higher in crescendos
to the highest treetops, a balcony to see all the circus.
With each glint and glisten, a melody forms and sails on the morning breeze.
The Muse nods and bows and summons the clown sailing backwards on
a white horse who gallops in time to the dog’s staccato barks while
a kangaroo coos lullabies to her little joey.
Skyscrapers, smog, honks, and headaches can’t hold them captive.
A seal honks and bounces while the ostrich struts and stretches to the blue sky.
Atop this magnificent bird, a child sits as a queen and
shares her triumphant hymn with the Muse.
The Muse of our childhood
watches, remembers, reminds, nudges, teases,
entreats, encourages, waits, and sighs.
She knows the lion is there to frighten us
yet remains safely away in a cage in this parade of life.
Her heart hums the elegies of loss and pain and
the requiems we compose with age, fear, and cruelty.
Even the monkey’s jabbering ditty warns of growing up and old.
Its rhymes cackle and crack, like the concrete tears in this neglected picture.
Once restless in youth, taking on the world in brave freedom and bold joy,
I am peaceful now in watching, guarding, guiding, and loving.
Morning’s raindrops fall softly,
music lilts through my five rooms,
bird chirps sail to the silver-gray clouds,
and I am at home.
Tea’s rosebuds and lavender linger on my tongue
while scents of mowed summer grass sneak through window shades,
this first morning after the first night after summer’s solstice
I am calmed and waiting.
I quiet myself as I wait and wonder.
Am I ready for this next journey in life?
Am I prepared to gracefully let go of who I once was?
I am still the dancer within these wobbling strides now.
Grown wiser, I am searching for a lesson to teach.
Like a horse galloping in wild abandon in red, gold, bronze fields then,
I am now a sea horse floating and flying among coral, blue, green reeds.
Stretching my mind, reaching up up up to the top shelf for the dictionary, diving into pillows and blankets for the last nap because I’m too anxious already. . . . Getting my workout before the Marathon begins.
I’m excited about joining this group again. Completing the half-marathon in 2017 was such fun, and I can’t wait for all that this summer’s challenge will bring as well!
Church bells chime longest, resonating fullest at hour twelve,
reminding us to pause, gather, or simply look up.
Cinderella’s slippers remained enchanted come midnight,
allowing her escape from servitude and despair.
Childhood’s year before thirteen marks a bittersweet passage
from innocence to responsibility.
Stars guide our actions with zodiac signs ordered
for each year’s passing phases while
We embrace symbols of ourselves
in Asian astrology.
Such is the Cosmic Order of
1X12, 2X6, 3X4 with logical, progressive complexity.
Do we blindly judge and blame in a fearful Witching Hour
In our juries of twelve?
Universal patterns pale to the power within us.
Gentle Swallowtail bows and skips, whirls and dives, sunlight glistening August’s golden sun.
Flittering on the ground’s twigs, shadows, and fallen petals
Suddenly up, up, upward this reeler soars toward the flowers above, catch wind’s breath.
Catching the wind’s breath, this tiny being fleetly moves on.
Such is the moment captured in the mind’s eye,
Yet Swallowtail survives in thunderstorms, too, its tiniest velvet wings
Taking on water then flicking drops onto waiting grass below.
Stronger than the winds yet sailing on them, Swallowtail skitters a light jig.
No migration comes for this little one:
What the world brings is what Swallowtail accepts.
Opposing spring’s showers and summer’s beams,
Winter’s chill sparks a new turn of metamorphosis.
The fleeting dance slows, halts, and comes to slumber,
A death comes for one in the darkness of winter while
New wings build within a chrysalis, a rhythm for dance
Already building to a music nature will provide.
A glaze settled over her vision, tinting everything a murky brown. This winter no longer seemed gray but the sepia tones of daguerrotype Images: old-fashioned, detached, sullen in the moment captured. So many big fears had abated after the accident. Still, these small shifts of non-reality churned the dread That life would be forever altered, halted, and haunted By sensations beyond her control, Her own body turned against her. Such a small decision made resolute in depth -- A focus on color: just one. Her favorite color yellow would be her guide, symbol, theme, subconscious influence, mantra, and promise of return But where and how? A focus on what she new would hint of the brightness an egg yolk at morning a daffodil delivered in the vase by her bed her favorite childhood doll now resting in her arms She couldn't see the yellow, all muddled with everything else But she knew it was there Believed, Looked, Imagined, and Trusted. One day she asked for a break outdoors, with the yellow sun in the bright blue sky she had asked about. Bundled in blankets, her head gently nestled in full pillows, Loved ones next to her A nurse giddy to leave for a few minutes. She felt the warmth soak onto her skin, Heard birds chirping in the clearness, and Smelled crisp air, so she knew the sun was yellow Believed, Looked up, Imagined, and Trusted. The eyes danced with shapes and colors scattering, Pulling in and out of focus, Strains of brightness striking new blows, and Little by little the colors starting to come into focus. The days she left, she felt the quiver of spring's chill In the bottom of the breeze and a softer warmth for just a moment. Well, she didn't really, but she knew about spring winds, and she Believed, Open her arms, Imagined, and Trusted. Were there two birds she heard sitting outside? What was the taste? Did she even know? She could remember, and so she would With each morning, then after the naps, and into the evening She would assign what she knew to be true, Believing, Opening her mind to remember, Imagining, and Trusting. It was when the blossoms came two months later, When the lavenders, lilacs, pinks, creams, and soft greens Dappled together in whispered breezes And spread across her one day in the garden That she again saw the yellow, shyly lifting in happiness and hope. The brightness filled her, and she looked and looked and looked Once more and always Through soft tears of joy.
Creator of the World and Mother to the Sun,
Neith of Ancient Egypt wove meaning and life from nothing.
Time passed, and her strength was woven into
Babylonia’s goddess Ishtar, whose political power, beauty, and fertility
Demanded the protection she gave in war and combat.
Her brazen strength woven indeed by her arms passed to
Arachne, she with a keen mind and deft fingers which tpleased and angered
The gods as she wove stories and emotions into lives and history.
Each has embodied the spirit of the spider,
A creature tiny, mighty, multifaceted in talent and patient with time.
Magical to some, reviled by many, she reflects exceptional strength
Drawn from within
Extending forward
Connecting
Pleasing
Glimmering in sunlight
Trapping those blinded by various forms of the dark.
Silken strength within these three females now persists in today’s women.
Whether in sewing shops, fashion industries, churches, civic centers, schools,
A strength emerges and grows, quiet yet powerful
In the weaving of new life, new communities, new possibilities.