Saturday, December 31, 2016

Resolving

On a night in the time of
Christmas, we sit after midnight in 
A room surrounded by the 
Belongings of our dead, 
And oh there is comfort
And the fire flickers messages
That all of those we know 
And cherish and pray for
See, in their fires.

Still,
There is no 
Special message, save in
This one, in this ending year:
My relatives, I pray for you,
I think upon your lives, and mine,
I join your hopes and your praying
And I too build my fires, 
And I too watch, as in this 
Eternal, everlasting flicker,
Pulling us all back to 
Essential,
Goodness and mercy,
Striving all the days of our lives,
We arrive here, 
Here in this 
New Year.

Tuesday, December 20, 2016

Solstice Eve

So I came out tonight to sit in this 
Christmassed conservatory, 
The tree near-perfect but for bare spots,
We all grow and have our bare spots.

Paper whites blooming here, and 
Summer stragglers building to next spring,
Rosemary in pots,
Hibiscus
And jasmine maybe, bougainvillea 
That I brought in for winter.

And out here, in a small pot
A peacock's feather and a very small 
Painting, from Haiti,
In the painting the children are
Playing with swords. 
Our friend brought us these things.
He wrote history about Haiti, fiction,
Voudon, and 
About France.
And I put the peacock feather
Into the small pot,
With tall curly twigs
I've kept because they're so pretty
And a year or two later, lo, the twigs
Had small, pale mossy leaves on them
Airborne, quite literally, no 
Living medium except air's alchemy
Nurturing organics of the earth that every
Spring time bloom,

And so ten years on, I will not 
Change much, or mess with this
Infinitesimal grand plan thriving 
In a certain light
In a certain place in this old
Farmhouse, knowing,
Finally, as I do here in this mystery 
That I am but a nanosecond, 
Just passing through.

Wednesday, December 14, 2016

December Sadness

I walk away and I think a little bit,
I think about the horrid
State of affairs in the world and 
How I cry and pray
How I try to hold
Whatever my constellation is
Together 

I find myself in this strange, urgent prayer,
And not necessarily suddenly, but 
All of a sudden something else 
Joins that supplicating reverie, 
And becomes
As alive as all the other transcendent pleas: 

Walk through my door.
Say hello, say goodbye, I really
Don't care; just
Walk through my door.
The dark grows longer 
Even as the light begs
Embracing. 

I struggle as best I can, but 
The closer I get to mortality,
The more I feel the 
Longing setting in.
Tomorrow I'll fume about
The dogs, the slick roads 
Really reasonable and stressful things,
Knowing somehow 
I'm hijacked.


Thursday, December 1, 2016

The Calm Before the Storm

Some nice weather moving in tonight.
I let go my worry while I keep to prayers, 
For everywhere else I turn a 
Blizzard, now tornado,
Blizzard, as I mentioned,
But here the splattering rain.

Reserving the 
Right to complain, 
Because when it doesn't go well and 
Wind blows against the house,
Hard rain comes through the ceiling,
Snowdrifts darken the windows and 
The progress to the barn
I am become disoriented. 
Shall I let the elements create here? 
After all, I'm just passing through,
Or can I just complain?

Right now, sure steady rain,
A hint of wind, manifesting
On the metal roofs, as 
I sit here listening, feeling
The this of wind and rain, an 
Ancient dance
Over and through the land and heaven.
I peer out my back windows, deep into 
The forest's inky night 
Across the Finger Lakes 

And beyond, beyond my vision or 
Any hint of one single thing but sky, 
Hundreds of miles way outside my 
Ken give way to cities, speed limits, 
Signs and confusions I'll 
Encounter as I wend my way through 
Outcroppings on my way to home.

It is time to think about
Home. Other people may 
Describe it, but
When I start out, quietly
Backing out my drive,
Closing off the static, mindless chatter,
When I decide to figure out
What it is I cherish, save 
My flesh and blood,
It does come down to 
Home.

Now, define it in your private
Heart, your own solitary gaze towards 
Where you formed. Strip away the
Years, go home, and birth again from
Your decent ground of being,
The one you recognize when you see 
A familiar line of sky,
Glimpsed above some treetops, 
Your city block,
Your early sunrise in a 
Neighborhood that sleeps,
Your prairie, mountains, buttes, 
Your rivers,
Trusting without knowing 
That you're home for
All of us, for all of them, for
A nanosecond, maybe less, so 
Make it rich, verdant, fertile, fertile
Dirt enough to carry blooming 
Into all that we don't know.

The rain. It should be snowing now,
Snowing on December's verge,
But at my age, I don't 
Have much time 
Left for the art of
Making bargains.

Tuesday, November 29, 2016

An Early Homesick

Oh, young, 
We went 
Among the 
Cranes, each voice different
When we stopped talking 
And listened, and idling,
We'd hear their voices.

And dark the daylight sky,
With them
Those birds, 
Returning, thickening prairie's 
Endless horizon, and
Stopping that sky

With bird song,
Bird talk, ancient.
Gather, they said,
We come home. 

No Certainties

Outside the November light blues
The approaching dark, winter's
Short sapphire twilight punctuated by 
A streak of gold underlining 
The western sky, along the indistinct 
Horizon.

It is time to change the order now, 
More necessary as my
Time runs out; 
Time, contrarily the parabola's fixed point,
And as the universe reorders, I am moving, 
Wondering how the pictures in my
Head will come alive, where they'll 
Dovetail, full-circling into light

November wondering. 




Friday, November 25, 2016

Now

Sometimes 
I feel a little unstable, doing the stuff
That's right, 
I'm getting old, 
Rough, hoping for a
Rough beauty, so
I guess it's best to move
On into this
Kicking crying 
Screaming wondering
Where she was all those years
Place,
Find a visceral voice, 
Not sure,
Quite, how yet.

I do know that 
To realize and say,
Just say it,
Love it, and 
Do it is entirely up to
Each of us, all of us, knowing it's 
A long corner, long slow corner
To turn, and whether we make it
Can't be known.

Who cares, anyway, really, who dares?
Just feel this precious moment 
Leave a voice, a tear, a handprint on
This earth, her water and sky, 
We are gone in a heartbeat, 
Like water around rock.

Mni Wiconi

Friday, October 21, 2016

October Meditation on a Red Eye

Tonight I took the clips 
Out of my hair,
The clips that hold it 
Tidy and presentable,
I took them out and wound a band
To hold a ponytail for sleep.
I swept my fingers up 
To catch the strands,
And, just accidentally, in 
An errant movement in a
Familiar nighttime ritual I gouged 
Ring finger straight into left eye,
And before I could say, 
How very stupid,
The burst vein bloodied rich and deep, 
The flooded eye a fright.
I thought to myself, arch, deprecating,
Oh, your carelessness has 
Made quite a costume 
For this scary season coming on, tho 
I have long hated Halloween.

And yet, here comes the glowing fall,
Trees' leaves in final brilliance 
Before the skies grey into snow, 
And it's the season of my birth.

Tonight rain pummels hard upon the
Metal roof and roves its vents, 
Coming in unwanted here and there, 
But I don't care anymore,
I just move the paintings 
And the furniture, 
And otherwise the towels do.
It occurs to me, 
In the dark night-lit velvet of 
Our uncurtained bedroom, 
As I'm writing this
That there's no such thing as 
Perfection in this life. 
We bear our wounds and imperfections,
Our shelter seeps and creaks from
Time's demands,
And more often than not 
We learn too late how 
We've wasted the psychic gift of 
Rising far above the mundane glories
We think we need
To live a life worth living, 
Though serenity was waiting.
I'm approaching seventy. 
I have no framework for 
What this means, so far,
Save sorrow, fury, and 
The fear I'll be irrelevant.

But persistence and the force of 
The energy I've been given
Hammer hard on my resisting soul, 
Like this rain upon my roof:
I make a promise to myself 
That I'll search the snowy woods 
Of this last quarter, and 
Hold fast to the resplendent vision
That snows will guild 
The forests' branches and 
Sprinkle silver as the dusk descends
Into unending skies. 

And anyway, 
I can't go back,
I cannot turn away, and though 
I may not wish to understand,
I am the coming change.



Friday, October 7, 2016

A Small Lament

Perfect imperfect, awareness
Dawns uneasily and
It seems that the ancient
Script says dismiss
Though sometimes it says accept —
Perhaps more awaits an excavation

In the march, Alpha and Omega,
I stop to ask myself:
Did you really need all this
Time that compresses now,
Races to a finish that can't be
Comprehended, just to
Figure out that in the end
It's human nature to regret?

Meanwhile this nature seems to
Right itself into rhythms
So primordial,
So much older than I can
Ever be in my allotted speck that
October runs ruinous morning glories
Over hedges starved for rain
Earlier in this drought,
And honeysuckle climbs like it is
June in a bursting, watered summer

Oh, I know the frost is coming
Just as these blooms take off,
The frost is coming,
That frost I dreaded
And hoped would never
Come has come already and
Now is mine, and
Just as all these
Things arise to boom, and
Despite what colors burst
Atop my pergola and riot
In the autumn ditches,
Now, oh now,
I am turning older.

Friday, September 23, 2016

All Things Must Change

I step away from mayhem,
And the fear about what 
Lies ahead, 
I walk outside to look around, 
The hinges on the paddock gate
Are rusty, and two old goats 
Are waiting for their apples
In the lean summer's end,
Yet one that brought some bounty,
Butterfly bushes and bee balm still
Making presence known in the early 
Dimming twilight of approaching fall,
A few coral flowers on the trumpet vine.

I'll fix some dinner and think about 
What is coming on this winter,
I'll worry about friends on
Northern plains, and fret about the
Dying animals and loss of species,
About injustice and 
The heartlessness that
Too often eats the souls of those 
Who live among us, 
I'll pray because it helps and 
Makes me feel better.

Time to start the evening meal,
Chop garlic from the garden 
Into fine and sticky slivers
To sautée with onion, and 
Then decide, as I'm going along, 
What's next, because this is 
The way I've always done it. 

Wednesday, September 7, 2016

Prayer

I am acquainted with trauma,
And under this quiet, dark night sky,
I also understand that
There is a world
Of bravery, the beauty of
The unknowing knowing of 
Resistance, the stance that says
You can't do this anymore. 

It's not just the global, 
The beautiful stand on
Northern plains, and beyond, far
Out there those 
Waterways, the 
Far archipelagoes,
Far fjords, the
Far cry to world,
Far plea, 

It's also
Echoing grievances, 
Ancient things we hardly
Can find the words for,
Slights, and all that terrible
Bullying, 
And in the primal logic 
Here it all returns
To make a local stand.

We are human family,
We thrive, grieve,
We struggle and 
Are we,
Are we
Turning a corner?
I think, and I let go 
The weeping prayer, and
I cry out, please,
Yes.

Mni Wiconi

Thursday, September 1, 2016

Reverie

Driving on the country road
I looked down and saw my
Teal blue pants and 
Atop, the turquoise of my tunic, 
A sudden shift and we were
Walking on the Mall
In another life,

Summer heat puffing up from pavement,
Slim navy teal blue skirt 
Floating about my legs, 
Turquoise shirt with pale russet 
Flowers, in retrospect peonies, 
I think,
Peonies, 
Short sleeves rolled up, cuffed, 
And collar slightly standing.
I wore sandals bought in Paris,
Fifteen years I wore them.

But none of this is necessary
Save to manifest when 
We were young, 
And improbable was possible, 
Color setting off the cascade
Of his arms, his energy and wit,
His red hair and his recklessness.

Driving on the country road 
Those days and months with him 
Collapsed into a second's pause 
On time's ever-shortening path:
There in the empty seat beside me,
In that tan plaid flannel shirt 
He loved to wear,
He sat, alive and present 
As anyone could be,
"Here beside you," he said to me,
And vanished into memory.

RIP David 1950-2007



Saturday, August 13, 2016

Drought Summer

Outside the night drips
Un-rained rain, as I wait for
The promise of deluge,
Knowing that it
May come or it may not.

I come to see the perseids,
But the sky is filled with smokey
Galleons bearing sacred water,
Along with tufty nighttime clouds, and
Grey wisps, grey brush strokes in
Canopy's infinite, mysterious palate,
And I can't see many stars.

These clouds, though,
They float above me as I question,
Looking for the ages' answers,
They float above the singing
Bullfrogged pond,
Above my garden, where
The story is persistence,
Roots digging deep into our
Mother Earth, deep in search of water.

Today I mowed anticipating
Deluge and on a few brief
Occasions in my mowing reverie
Rain split the beating sun with large
Orbs glinting as they pelted me,
But I didn't run for any cover,
Rain the only necessary.

I thought, today, I've only
Mowed this place three times
In this stern exacting summer,
Drought says, I am
Harbinger if you're not
Careful, and so I stop to praise
The light in every sunset,
The glint of drop on leaf and bough,
The smell of relief when
Earth receives some blessed rain.

It's not so gorgeous this summer,
Truth be told, and though
I'm doing all I'm able to,
To care for what I have here, to
Care for what I love,
I have to excavate my deepest knowing,
And in the infinite comfort of
Believing that this all makes some
Connected sense, heart beating life
Thrumming one to one on the
Eternal way to All,
I find myself asking, with
Certainty fringed by hope and question,
Doesn't beauty always shine
In reality's relief?

Wednesday, August 3, 2016

Finding

Here the Dipper
Here the inexplicable sky
Here the bullfrogs
Here the fox,
Coyote,
Gulp, my brother frog
Sing, my tree frog sisters,
Praise, my starry Milky Way,
Spangling into my infinity,
My unknown.
Oh magnificent symphony,
This night, these stars, these
Far-off layers of lives elsewhere,
We are infinite; 
The bullfrogs say so,
And as I sit, spellbound in night,
Up there 
The stars shine into their 
Most perfect and 
Impossible.


Tuesday, July 26, 2016

The Family Visit

Down the road the dogs
Are yipping in the heat that finally
Gives in to dusk's respite, and above in
The great dome of heaven another
Jet heads towards Europe, across the
Maritimes, and then the vast Atlantic.

There's little traffic, though,
Here in these skies. Long ago
Someone taught me to read 
The angle of ascent, hear
The singular whirs of engines,
Watch the swoop of direction as 
Taking off, the pilots 
Change the headings, all 
Clues to destination.

Now in these days they made 
To come in the United States, 
This cauldron of unrest and strife,
Fear covering the land like nettles
And neighbor against neighbor, all
Common sense jettisoned to
The uncertainties that heat and dust 
And drought and apocalyptic rains call
From the unsettled knit of elements,
And after all, we're imperfect beings,
Which means we should be scared. 

Now in these days I make to prepare 
The home in the United States
For the ancestors' children's children
Who come because from the homeland
Long ago this is the place that called 
To some of them:
Opportunity, love, adventure,
Solace or escape. 
And there were those who stayed behind; 
I dare say some of these are stories 
We may never really know.

And anyway, 
What a gift they're bringing,
Our family, from across the roiled Atlantic,
They come because somewhere abroad
This place is beacon still. 
They come to bond with us and share 
Ourselves. 
They come with fresh eyes open,
They come because there still is time 
To have some impact  
In the slim shallows of what in life is 
Unexpected and unknown.
The way it's always been,
The way this story goes.



 

Saturday, July 16, 2016

Adjusting Attitude

My old friend's old dog is dying.
The world beyond my small dirt patch
Spins so wildly I don't care 
To try to understand,
For now, and 
I forgot a special task,
Neglected to pay a past due bill, 
And sometimes sit, bewildered,
Wondering if it's just me
Or if the axis tilts a bit
In search of beauty's balance. 
A few spots of rain have greened 
The sere view outside my doors, while
Down the road my neighbor hays
His fields, and soon he will be baling.
There is respite in small moments.
I sit outside and listen to the bullfrogs,
And my old dog of fifteen years
Lopes across the straggly lawn to the 
Pond where bullfrogs call. I 
Watch an ordinary sunset start to slip 
And glow golden, fiery, 
Down behind the spruces that screen
My neighbor's fields, and 
Hummingbirds arrive with their little 
Motors revving at the 
Feeder Peter's tied with red ribbon.
In this minute, two, five or more,
I am aware of homeostasis, 
And in this moment I can say I'm 
Thankful:
All is well.

Friday, July 8, 2016

Birthday in a Drought Year

Night dry as ancestors' bones
Parched back into earth,
They return, the ancestors,
We all return in time,
After our sliver of shining light
Flickers and we go to stars.

I step outside to sniff the scent
Of linden, perfuming a thirsty 
Landscape; it comforts me and
In the velvet night I can't see 
The brown, once-green stretch now lit
By fireflies out towards the pond, 
It's very low.

But linden never fails to arrive with
Its reminder that for a few short weeks,
No matter what, 
I will be transported by its heady smell,
Balance in a world sometimes careening,
A few short weeks of balance 
And perfection.

In the nighttime sky the moon hangs 
Sceptered, and there's a hint of
Rain. Far across the rolling
Western miles,
My friend, dear of my teenaged heart,
Pinches herself and
Wonders how it can be
That this is the eve of her 
Seventieth birthday. 

It doesn't do that I tell her
That she's beautiful
And wise, that her gifts enrich 
Each soul whose path she crosses,
And she's struggling a little, though
I know she will arrive at her resolve and
Bloom into new glory 
In her own sweet time, just

As linden's gifts reappear and remind
That while roots go earth-bound deep, 
When seen through branches redolent of
Lime, berry and ambrosia, 
The sky glows ravishing anew.

I wonder when we start returning,
And when the body, rich and pulsing,
Flesh and blood, fears and dreams
Starts to turn to face a brighter light? 
For some of us, we've decades left; 
I think my wondrous friend 
Has decades left, and
No matter what, I am joyful for her,
Grateful for long years,
Our long connection.







Monday, June 20, 2016

Reckoning in a Country Garden

I've been here before,
In past years' ever-changing solstice light
A little unbalanced, I suppose
But I have always been moving
And maybe that's what
This still-point means: to understand
This life is always moving,
Always dreaming and awakening.

Perhaps it's less a reckoning,
More my vision about
The way things ought to be.
So I search for accord, and in
The solstice coming now,
Harvest of persistence, a
Pause in motion in a
Strange unfolding
I see there's much awaiting,
I see some things will change.

Last night I looked up at the sky,
And earlier I'd heard the
Voices of the wind while planting.
And in the winds through
Sere dry grass today, and
Rustling through my dry land garden,
Breeze comes cool
Across my cheek.

In this evening's late and unremitting heat
The sky begins to shift to magic light,
And a promise births:
I will keep my grateful going.

Sunday, May 22, 2016

Not Quite June

I watched the sky grow dark
As it closed off some 
Old hang ups, 
Like, am I understood or good enough?
But really, what those others think is 
Not of my will or ken,
It is how they choose 
The order of this life.

I am flawed, as are we all, 
And rather than
Exhausting myself
On anything save what I love
I intend to watch the sky and stars
For signs I may have missed, and
Though I may not yet understand 
Just what it is that I am seeing, 
I am the better, moving
Into this, some strange new light,
And I must say, 
It's been awhile
Since I have seen horizon.


Tuesday, April 19, 2016

Blue Ridge in the long twilight

All of a sudden the light
gentles down
and stillness rises like a
soft hymn
from a ground laid with
long fence shadows
like lattice 
under red bud canopy.

How is it that time stops,
minutes no longer meted out?
Heartbeat slows to deepest calm
leaving space for ancient breath, for
here, creation deemed
perfection, and 
in a vast moment of 
homeostasis
I understand
the wanderer is home.

Once long ago
in the days before the flood
we stayed the hours to watch the moon 
rise giddy on the hillside,
though I am not really sure
that it was us.
We sat atop the fragrant mound,
the fireflies a magic show
I took your shirt from you that night
buried my face into the flannel, 
took your picture with my mind.
We loved each other then.

Decades on salvation blooms
from scented air, from shadows playing
on the mountains, 
the old hauntings still alive and
no one would understand why I 
fell so hard, not once but
twice; perhaps it was
those long twilights. 

Saturday, April 2, 2016

Zephyr

The wind outside is steady, with
no bursts, no chop, and gentle tho 
I'm not quite sure 
what I should call its voice, 
then as I'm quiet, listening, 
the Zephyr comes to mind,
blowing constant and majestic 
from some jagged cleft between 
the ranges of my memory,
funneling a reach back 
to some far long ago.

Ice-cold cars, and 
berths so small as to be tiny,
linens slick and tight, and
dense wool blankets thin,
we thought we slept
but all the night the train rocked on 
and yellow street lamps strobed
under shades not fully drawn,
and we glimpsed the barren crossings 
In the non-existent towns 
on plateaus chiseled from the plains, 
and rising to the foothills 
and front range.

In a morning strange and
alien, we sat very still,
little children minding manners,
and waiting for our orange juice 
in glasses shaped like bells,
ate waffles, maple syrup
sticky on our chins
and then we sat away the afternoon
had peanut butter sandwiches, 
while the mountains and
the sky grew bigger 
in the dome car on 
the Zephyr to the coast. 

I don't know if memory really
matters much or serves a purpose 
unless it's grand or transformational, 
but this small picture burned
as bright and sweet as if we'd 
journeyed yesterday, and 
for that, I thank the wind.



Sunday, March 27, 2016

A Farmhouse Easter

Back towards the pine woods, buff hills
Hold the winter, though it wasn't bad,
And though there was scant snow this year
Pond glistens full, recharging from
An earth not stressed for water,
At least not here

And to be sure, daffodils and tiny crocus
Dot the garden, where the ground lies
Disheveled from the creatures
Burrowing all the winter long.

We set the table with old silver
And platters from my mother,
Gone so long I strain to
Remember how she filled
Crystal vases with bright blossoms
Or fretted if the soufflé fell, or
Pursed her lips so not to laugh at my
Brothers' risqué stories.
It seemed then, in memory, that
Easter came with sun and spring,
Scent pungent as the
Loamy earth woke up,
And she was vibrant in those years
Long before she faced the end.

Now this Sunday late afternoon when
I gaze upon the buff hills rolling
Up to meet the dusk grey sky,
The faintest scrim of green seems
To veil my eyes -- in reverie, I cannot say,
Or perhaps it's simply just
The promise of the season,
And we are quiet all together,
Grateful for each other, and the past.

Sunlight long faded, shadows
Deepen in the dining room, we linger,
Feeling ghosts, unsummoned stories,
Some regrets.
I can't say I am unhappy,
I'm just floating on the stream that
Takes us all one day to
Far beyond that scrim,
Where why not say that there
Awaits the golden laughter,
Fragrant flowers, always springing
Easters, and my quixotic mother,
In chorus with a world made right
Because we kept on moving toward
The light beyond our ken.

In my daughter's weathered farmhouse
The kitchen smells of oranges and garlic
A low fire nips the chill and she
Pours a sparkling wine.
We settle in to tussle with the dogs,
And watch the night time gentle down,
Then say goodbye, and leaving then,
Another Easter slips away
Into the waiting blooming.

Sunday, March 20, 2016

Yoghurt

Sitting in the sun
Eating vanilla yoghurt and blueberries
Creamy and elegant, liquid velvet,
Reading a letter from a friend. 

The yoghurt makes me think of
Cid's Market in Taos
Everything so fresh
And most home-grown.

Sit with this, I tell myself, 
And I pause 
Waiting for some 
Revelation to arrive.

He knows he's dying, 
She says in the letter,
And she says they are
Back to where they
Were in the 
Beginning

Along the Rio Grande and
The little streams and rivelets
Flowing from the mountains
Along the back dirt roads
To Arroyo Seco, I picture 
Banks and ditches 
Wearing yellow, spritzing
White and 
Purple things emerging
From the winter

We die the way we live,
I'll tell her, 
And,
You didn't choose this learning,
And then I remember our mother
Died this day, seventeen years
Gone now.

But every spring when I start to 
Work again in my garden, 
I find her there, and 
Think of her, 
And how there
Really isn't ever any end,

Just change, new shape,
A different physics in 
A universe where 
Stars realign
In season's heavens,
Full moons in processional
To the Equinox
And what is gone is 
Eternally reborn.

I know there are those who
Die and never give a peace 
To the ones
Who wait and dread
Because there 
Sometimes isn't one, 
They return to clay and dust 
But then arrive again, 
Because they
Will.

In my garden, my mother waits,
Sun dips behind high clouds
For a moment. 
There's no connection
To the yoghurt,
But I decide to tell my friend
All will be well
In time.