peek-a-boo
via video chat
born during a plague year
she hides her face
by snuggling into her mother
Sheila Sondik
sheilas
I'm a printmaker and poet in Bellingham, WA.
Daydream
What strange lethargy
overcomes me in Zoom
meetings!
The strain of looking
attentive and presentable
in the long stretches
of listening, not talking.
How odd that water bottles
are not much in evidence.
Everyone must be uptight
in those Zoom-scapes.
At least we don’t need
to wear a mask!
Inspired, perhaps, by my
virtual bucolic background, my
mind drifts after an imagined
firefly to a rustic cottage
above treeline, where once
I relished my hot porridge,
sitting on a tree stump,
eating outside with my aunt.
Baa, baa, baa
Point if you will,
but my ram is fine and dandy,
destined to go to Heaven.
Our family was threatened
by a home wrecker . . . but
the schemer was vanquished.
Like a cool drink of water,
the upright ram reappeared,
bringing coals to Newcastle,
that upstanding sheep.
(An emoji translation that turned into another homage to Niedecker, who wrote collections of new Mother Goose poems.)
Season of No Traction
Yes, Yeats summed it up
and we didn’t listen.
We seem never to listen.
You know: no convictions, the good
up against the passionate intensity
of the ignorant, etc.
How each hourly travesty is
quickly eclipsed by the next
so memory doesn’t function
as we need it to. Where to begin
to reckon the awful toll greed
and heartlessness
have already accrued? Nothing
sticks. The thefts from the masses
to give to the few, the infants
in cages, the medical equipment
hoarded in a time of plague?
Time to screw our courage and
our memories to a sticking-place.
The murders. The mud slung so far
just runs down our walls.
Pay attention to one day.
Call out the outrageous
with true outrage. No
traction, no action, no
satisfaction. About face.
A Close Call?
I left New York City on March 5 to fly home to Washington State. I’d spent 3 weeks with my new granddaughter and her parents.The COVID-19 pandemic was a known entity, but the US was still counting on its exceptionalism and other stupid beliefs to discount the threat’s reality. I’d stayed in my usual midtown hotel. Although it was far from fancy, it still was popular and had a crossroads-of-the-world feeling. I’d hoped to treat myself to a ticket to Carnegie Hall on my last night, to see an all-star trio play Beethoven. My husband asked me not to go. Cautious by nature, he is a retired physician living with cancer and was highly-attuned to the news and possibilities of the virus. Since I was pretty exhausted, I capitulated without any disagreement.
What if I’d gone? Who knows? When I arrived at the deserted JFK Airport, I realized the denial phase was ending for New York. I read a piece in the New Yorker recently which mentioned an Icelander who’d been in NYC at the same time as I had. Just before he left, he attended a party with finger foods. He got sick soon after he got back home.
The trio (Yo-yo Ma! Emanuel Ax! Kavakos!) played, no doubt beautifully, packed up their instruments, and hunkered down at home. The virus continues its travels and depredations. People demonstrate their range of horrific and soul-stirring behaviors. Beloved things, like her mother’s face, disappear and reappear in our granddaughter’s world, to her enormous delight. Peek-a-boo!
Babies Meet Trees
baby grand-
daughters staring
at the sky
boughs so high
above their round heads.
the first in Oz
snug in Dad’s arms
her rapt stare
her newborn hair
ruffling in the breeze.
the second
in CORVID Gotham
a stolen hour
a leafy bower
leaves whisper in her dreams.
(Lorine Niedecker invented this 5-line form, inspired by haiku.)
Dear B–
your galaxies
of friends
still mourn
your corn-
y brilliant humor.
(note: This is based on a form by Lorine Niedecker.)
A Pandemic Bop
Other people
are finding
too much time
on their idle hands.
I can’t relate, I seem to be
running on a hamster wheel.
(Where are the hamsters, anyway?)
My husband does the cooking now.
I stay up late. I haven’t read a book
for months. Instead, emails, the torrents
of bad news, one unthinkable reality
after another. I end each day wanting
hours more. Is my old life elsewhere,
running on a hamster wheel?
1000-piece jigsaw puzzles fill
my friends’ excess hours. Long
distance grandkids call. What about
grandparents? The virologists field
the questions. How much longer
running on a hamster wheel?
Recipe for End-Stage Capitalism
1. Free range greed
2. Racism
3. Out-of-control technology
4. Virulent viruses
5. Climate change
Mix the first 3 ingredients together in the largest bowl you have. They will rise like crazy when combined.
Add the viruses sparingly to the climate change, which has been simmering overnight.
Combine both mixtures, beating vigorously.
You’re on your own from this point on. Watch what happens and text your observations to:
#Toolittletoolate
Primate Behavior Class
my first time
seeing
Jane Goodall
a young thing
making contact
struck dumb
by her courage
by her brilliance