Tuesday, April 30, 2024

Silence

 


When the world walked two by two,
and she alone,
silence felt lonely.
And so the universe set her the task
of embracing solitude.

She began to observe
how people seemed to need
a lot of talk and noise
to know they were alive.
And so she listened
more deeply,
to the hum of the planet
and the music of the spheres,
the way the night sky
seemed, almost, to sing,
and to Grandfather Cedar
breathing peace
straight into her heart.

She tuned in to the voice within,
wiser than any outer voice,
but one it takes far too long
to learn to trust.

At some point,
silence came to live inside her,
a vast, interior silence
where there were no words,
no thoughts, no worries,
a time when the sound of the sea
washed all away,
leaving behind only
peace, presence,
and joy.

And now she knows all about
the silence from which
all music comes.*
It is her dearest friend.
Through it, the beautiful
symphony of life
plays like a mellow clarinet
on a summer afternoon,
warm and golden, counterpoint to
the full brass band
of daily existence,
all inter-woven and living
mellifluously together
in her heart.

*Mozart said: The music is not in the notes, but in the silence between.

for Mary's prompt at What's Going On: Silence

Monday, April 29, 2024

Fever Dreams

 


I learned at the cinema to dream
how my future would be, back when
life was as cold as a convent in mid-winter,
back when fever dreams were mortal sins,
back when my experiment in being a mystic
went all awry.

It all turned out so differently from what I'd dreamed.
I said this to a friend last week, adding
"I never could have dreamed it
the way it's been,"
and she shook her head in wonderment,
with big eyes, having read my memoir.

I had a fling or two, with no finesse. I experimented
with domesticity in prison garb and broke free
like an alligator on the run from men with spears.

Nowadays I've turned the volume low. I take pills
that don't remedy the pain. I've learned that
only dogs know how to truly love.
I'll never make my earlier mistakes again.


Ha. Shay's Word List took me down an unexpected path. I love when that happens. It was the cold as a convent that got me going. 

( I scooped the Fitzgerald quote above Shay's poem and changed it a bit to fit mine - I haven't read her poem yet, of course, as I didn't want to be influenced.) But the alligator line made me think of her. Smiles.)

Tuesday, April 23, 2024

A Poem for Your Pocket

 


When I'm looking for light,
I read poems.
When I'm fleeing heartache,
I write them.
Maybe I look out my window
and see some small puff-ball clouds
slowly moving across my morning sky,
or two eagles, circling,
wind-surfing the thermals.

This is your poem.
I want it to speak to
that part of your heart
that has walked many miles
to reach it.
Perhaps you don't read poetry,
thinking it a country of no resonance
for you. Perhaps, if you give it a try,
it will surprise you, connect
with a feeling, a shared experience.
Maybe you will do a mental double-take,
realizing that words can dance,
sometimes - albeit infrequently -
so nimbly across the page,
like young Jack leaping the candlestick
all those many years ago.

This is your poem.
If it bores you, no worries.
This poem's feelings cannot be hurt.
Like the tired heart
that composed it, it has seen enough pain
to not need to go down those roads again.

Keep this poem
in your heart's pocket,
and, one day when I am gone,
come back and find
me in it
once again.

for my prompt at What's Going On - an open link to celebrate April Poetry Month.

Monday, April 22, 2024

Blessings

 


Gathering of Allies
photo by Marcie Callewaert Photography
I'm in the middle, front row, raised fist,
cane, blue plaid shirt

Sitting in a rocking chair in the sun

Giving treats to passing dogs; their smiles and bright, happy, glowing eyes warming my heart

 Cherry blossom scent on the breeze,  small hummers drinking deeply, so thirsty after the long winter of anticipation

Thinking of yesterday's rally of Tla-o-qui-aht and allies, showing up for Mother Earth, celebrating how Wah-nah-juss was saved from clearcutting 40 years ago, when the First People Just Said No

Remembering passionate early mornings on the blockades, how alive we felt back then, making change, standing on the road for the trees

Turning off the bad news; turning on morning, and birdsong; recalling waking in the night to see a full round Grandmother Moon, golden and smiling in the sky, and looking right at me

Watching a juvenile eagle making random circles overhead, breathing in all that is peaceful and hopeful, beautiful and sun-kissed, all around; nothing left to wish for but more days just like this, sitting in a rocking chair in the sun

Except a world healthy enough to sustain the young eagle, and all of earth's young ones, into the future


A list of blessings for Shay's Word List

Tuesday, April 16, 2024

Poet In Search of a Poem



When life has worn you into
an unthinking shell
without words
and you sit, blinking into space,
in a place of No Thought,
tap the lifeline
of poetry
that lifts your heart
out of its everyday concerns,
into the realm
of midnight moons
and hungry ghosts.

Look up into the raven sky
and chart the silver moon goddess
as she trails mystery
like a gossamer cloak
across the heavens.

Poetry
remembers that life
is more than bread and worry,
that it is beauty and aliveness
and gilt-edged miracle.
It is the suspension of disbelief
and the fastening of one's heart
on Possibility
and Promise.

It is the lifting of one's eyes
above the "raveled sleeve of care"
to remember music,
the dance of language,
love,
and the silver shining sea,
forever ebbing and flowing
upon a shore lined
with old growth,
and then fastening
one's heart
and vision
and belief
firmly
upon that.


For Susan's prompt at What's Going On - What IS it about poetry?  The quote is from Macbeth.

No Solace at Lost Shoe Lake

 


I looked for solace at Lost Shoe Lake,
vividly picturing that long-ago settler,
desperately slogging the muddy slough -
bitter as his shoe was suctioned
off his foot, and gone,
a catastrophe unlikely
but, alas for him,
too true.

I imagine his chagrin, thoughts
of the rocky miles ahead 
circling his brain like blackflies,
his journey
caught between disbelief
and dread.

No solace for him
for a hundred miles
at least.
No solace for me
as I walked the lonely shore,
without my beloved
grinning
big black beast.

Sunday, April 14, 2024

Bird

 



I imagined a gathering of magpies
in the tops of the alder grove,
as I sat in the sun,
breathing in the scent
of white cherry blossoms.

There was an outbreak of loud chattering, 
all bird voices speaking at once.
What manner of bird was this?
What new song were they
trying to sing? What alarm
sent their chatter into
such brief furore?

I imagined a murmuration,
a stupefaction, of small noisy birds.
As their voices crescendoed,
then subsided and grew still, I pondered
the brief raucous uproar. Perhaps
the loudest among them had won
the fattest worm. Perhaps an elder bird,
dignified in tophat and cane,
had fallen asleep
and toppled off his perch.

Hopefully, his bird-folk had caught 
and steadied him firmly
on the branch
just in time.


While there are magpies elsewhere in BC, they are not in evidence in Clayoquot Sound. But as this was all imaginary, as I rocked in the sun, I had a bit of fun contemplating what might have caused all the ruckus. I identified strongly with the senior bird, needless to say. Smiles.