Tuesday, August 28, 2018

Moment

Apples are blushing up
Falling to the ground as the goats bleat
Joy when their paddock fills with sweetness
(Peter rains fruits on them each evening).
The petunias that bullied my clay pots from
Taos have ceased the riot
Of their cascading blooming; I shall chop
Them down, when their leggy residuals turn
To rust, heralding an autumn, an
Autumn that still must arrive
Although this summer of fire and water
Has not been easy to apprehend.

I sit in my favorite spot outside
Watching wisps of clouds in tentative
White, greying into a blue that feels
Cool. We thought the heat was going to be
Unbearable, but it simply wasn’t.
I say to myself that those clouds aren’t
My left eye, although sight is going if I don’t
Tend to taking care of it,
Which I haven’t done.
My head hurts, the welcome certainty
That this is simply pain of being hungry,
Maybe too tired, and
Not the crisis of a planet.
Do you see how easily good
Intentions go awry?
I have so much to reclaim
And I can’t help one soul
Until my own reassembles.

Here, I say to small creatures,
Stealthy nighttime visitors,
Apples for you, a living pond, low some,
In spite of rain; rain damps
Under my bare feet the grass and weeds
Like velvet, tinctured green and
Striped by mower leavings’ browning.
I walk out towards the light.

In mercurial sky,
This leaving light gilds edges’
Cloudy universe of unending change.
Day gives way to nighttime,
Night gives way to dawn.

Monday, August 27, 2018

Untitled

A time now, everywhere
For balance. 
Hold steady, we are 
Pulling on the
Same side of the rope.
I can’t even process everything,
Probably because there is
A bit too much incoming
At this moment. 
I’m on the balance beam
A bit of damned 
Vertigo
But still
Something 
Beautiful
Peaceful
That thousand acre grassland in South Park
At near ten thousand feet 
Reshaped my sense
Of place, of everything
Except it all familiar 
Sinew and bone. Heart.
So lonesome 
Tu me manque

Thursday, August 16, 2018

On the Western Slope

This grey morning, early,
Eyes open to a hillock 
Covered in sage and gorse,
Small white succulents dotting 
The dusty ground, 
Mountain lupine faint purple in the
Coming end of summer,
The mountains immovable 
Except of course they aren’t,
Glacial their changing, folly we
Think we see their constant.
Back down this western slope
Swaths of standing dead soon
Giving way to wildfire and in time
The aspen and an autumn
Gold of new. 
All things must change.
Skittering and full of purpose, 
Magpies glean the 
Jutting uplift,
Black and white, their bands 
Of iridescent midnight blue 
Flicker in this new day’s light 
Now blooming from the grey.
How to explain
A homeostasis lit by magpies and 
Sturdy wildflowers? 
No matter, it is gone to 
Call of day, a pause unbidden, 
A world contained and whole,
Gifted in the moment. 


August 13, 2018

Tuesday, August 14, 2018

August 11 Aloft

For a reason I don’t quite understand
I threw old terrors to the sky, 
I read about all the sciences
I read about the fears and phobias
I read about once again
The places I do not wish to miss, and 
I decided to fly. 

For more than a decade, nearly two,
To fly meant someone dying, and in
An early memorable event, 
I melted down on
A flight that turned around to put me 
Back on terra firma. 

And then the long years,
Missing family, missing beloved friends, 
Missing, and all the while I was growing 
Into a newer woman, with some 
Fulsome years who does
Not believe that life, loving 
Should be lost to terrors, insecurities, or 
Unexpected vicissitudes, finally 
Clear-eyed about what I want to do
With my allotted time:
Welcome the uncertainties that 
Accompany the unknown, the glorious 
And vast.  

Outside the aircraft’s windows 
At 30,000 feet, the cumulus clouds
Are the architectures of gods and
Visionaries, and I begin to 
Become composed
The physical demons of unrealistic fears
Are quieter now, 
And time and again I remember what my 
Destination brother tells me:
Let what seeks you find you. 
I brought Wendell Berry’s Wheel, his 
Meditations on life and death of life
Reborning into new, in mystery,
I know mother earth survives, and 
I know that we do not, nor our progeny.
Along every way, terror, 
Threatening science,
Political despair, cruelty, 
Those things’ lives are limited, 
As are ours.
Up here, nothing from those days 
Is any different, except
My newly-birthed mandate to
Myself to live high, hard, true, brave

There is no static in the sky;
For awhile I viewed the Finger Lakes 
And Lake Ontario from on high; 
Soon I’ll be watching the Great Plains 
If I can even see them from so high aloft
Giving way to the Rockies, and I’m 
Promising myself I’m 
Going to move, and love, with what time I’ve left, purposeful, intentional, 

And stubbornly less afraid. 

Thursday, August 9, 2018

Flying

I’m packing for this long journey, 
Knowing there will always be one constant:
Salvation. 
Do we run out of time?
I turn to face a
Veil less and less indistinct
And the vibrancy this side
Of heaven overwhelms.

Thursday, August 2, 2018

Reach

Out in the near dark I hear
The clink of the old coffee can, 
He slings goats’ grain and pellets,
Checks their water on his way 
To swim

The light
From that small barn imperceptible
From where I sit, relishing the outside, 
Scents of grow, 
Blink of fireflies

Something gorgeous
Pulls the
Towel ‘round his shoulders, 
Pulsing out towards pond’s dark pastel, 
Trails leading to the dock,

And I know,
Myself,
Alighting to view
Nighttime’s long twilight, 
(So rich, the looking back), that 
Old things glow from 
Barn gardens’ stoney beds,
And from the pond. It all  
May never be enough,
May be enough, 
It simply is.