Home

  • Running Late and an Existential Crisis

    A local man smoking a cigarette
    and hocking phlegm onto the pavement,
    a large pickup with a horse trailer
    taking up a chunk of the parking lot,
    an SUV with kayaks on the top
    and bicycles on the back,
    three teenage boys with pimply faces
    clutching cold Ale-8-One bottles,
    a red sports car with dark windows,
    a mother and a crying child,
    a carload of twenty-something girls
    laughing and playing music I don’t recognize,

    and me on my way to a poetry reading.

    I pull my credit card out of the card reader
    and begin pumping gas.
    I don’t recognize a single person at this gas station
    even though I’m smack dab in the middle of my hometown.

    Here we all are, gathered for different reasons,
    all with the same need,
    and I wonder if this group of people
    will ever be gathered in the same place again;

    if we will ever know each other, if anyone
    will remember my face.

    Will I remember their faces?

  • Sweeping Superstitions

    Don’t let nobody sweep under your feet, she said
    as I pulled my feet up onto the couch,
    placing my little girl chin on my knees.
    “Why can’t you sweep under my feet?” I asked.
    I want to see you married someday, my girl.

    From her brown corduroy couch, I watched
    as she swept her floors, a wooden handled
    straw broom for the kitchen and dining room,
    and a rainbow vacuum for the carpets.
    She sang and swept. Swept and sang.

    I was there the day the salesman sold
    her the promise of clean carpets
    and an easier time keeping her house in order.
    It seemed to me she worked just as hard
    with the rainbow as she had before.

    The day I was moving out of my university dorm
    and into my first apartment, she visited me.
    She held out a brand-new broom and dustpan.
    Don’t take your old broom into your new house, she said.
    Let the old dirt stay where it is.

    When everyone had cleared out of my new place,
    I swept and sang. Sang and swept.
    I surveyed my kitchen floors just like she had
    and decided it was probably for the best
    that I’d left the old dirt in my old life.

  • Math and Science

    Love is geometry.
    Or maybe it is all biology
    and electric pulses in our brains.
    Possibly algebra where love equals
    (a+b2)/2
    or something like that some other
    poet has calculated to the enth degree.

    Whatever it is, I find myself swirling
    and so thoroughly steeped
    in the euphoria, that I have no need
    of oxygen or breathing or anything whatsoever
    if it is not him and his overwhelming goodness.

  • Jim

    What you do to pay the bills is not who you are, he said,
    tipping his beer towards me and then taking
    a long swig while I watched his eyes sparkle.

    We ate our cake, chatting about the newly married
    couple making spirals around the room, stopping
    for a kiss whenever anyone clinked their glass.

    Who you are is what you do in your spare time.
    He scraped the icing from his plate, smiled
    at his wife, and then leaned back in his chair.

    So, my dear, who are you?

    I didn’t know Jim well. He was the husband of one of my very good friends, Sarah Ryder. He recently passed, and I thought it fitting to share with the world the spectacular advice that he gave to me many years ago at a wedding reception. “What you do to pay the bills is not who you are. Who you are is what you do in your spare time.” Those simple sentences have stuck with me ever since. I repeat them to myself over and over on a regular basis. Jim was an absolute light and he will be missed.

  • Coffee Creamer

    I wasn’t looking, and she added too much creamer.
    I drank the coffee anyway,
    the sweet liquid coating

    my teeth and tongue with a layer
    of slick sugar I wouldn’t be able to rid
    myself of without a thorough brushing.

    Her forearms tensed and flexed
    as she balled her nightgown in her fists
    and in her lap trying to hide the anxiety,

    and I wondered how we had come to this place:
    the serving coffee and being anxious
    and not meeting each other’s gaze.

    We need to talk, she said,
    just as I was standing to leave.

    I sat back down and waited.

  • Summer Jewels

    She could often be found
    admiring the fruits of her labor
    in her fully stocked pantry –
    mason jars of green beans, corn,
    tomato juice, tomato sauce, various soups.
    She adjusted their stacked-up lines,
    shining jewels in summer colors
    waiting to be enjoyed once the cold came in.

    Six months after my granny died,
    I watched my mother from her kitchen table,
    She held the last of the green beans,
    having rationed the last ten jars,
    knowing that when they were gone
    there would be no replacement beans
    coming this summer.

    Opening the jar, she let tears fall.
    Silvery jewels of grief slipping silently
    down her cheeks and onto her apron.
    She held them up to her nose,
    and then quickly dumped them
    into the pot on the stove.

    The last of the summer jewels
    graced our Sunday lunch plates
    for a final time.

  • The Squeeze

    We gathered around the worn table,
    buttering fresh bread and passing
    bowls of buttered peas and mashed potatoes.

    I had a horrible dream last night, he said.
    I looked up from my peas and watched
    him hold back tears, heard his voice
    hitch up the octave, and caught a glimpse
    of shaking hands before he slipped
    them into his lap.

    The stoic man of my childhood
    has disappeared in the last twelve years,
    grandkids change a man apparently.

    He was lost, and I couldn’t find him, he said.
    He told us how he searched everywhere –
    quiet corners, shady stands of trees, the creek.
    I yelled for him until my throat was raw.

    I looked back at my peas and heard him finally lose
    what modicum of control he had left.
    But he finally came running down the hill
    and threw himself into my arms.

    He looked towards the living room,
    seeing through the walls,
    to where my youngest was silently reading
    in a quiet corner with a blanket over his head.

    “It was just a dream, Steve,” she said
    and reached over to squeeze his hand.

  • While Weathering a Windstorm

    The bradford pears and the redbuds
    bloomed early this year.
    I don’t know if there is any significance
    to this phenomenon,
    but it has left me feeling off kilter.

    In springs past, when I finally spot
    the redbuds blooming on their black branches,
    it meant the long dark of winter had passed;
    that I could breathe deep the sun
    that floods my cells with vitamin d.

    But now, with early blooms being ripped
    from bending, swaying branches, I feel gutted –
    not knowing if it is time to breathe
    or if I still need to hide in layers of
    wool and thick cotton.

  • Rain Birds

    It was only the occasional flutter
    of wings and the soft cooing
    that gave them away.

    They crowned the clocktower,
    looking every bit a part of the architecture,
    and I wished I had their job:

    fly and coo, find food and flutter in the rain,
    exist because they are
    with no questions asked.

    Surely, if I climbed up to them
    they would take flight,
    not knowing my intention

    is just to sit and rest,
    rest in the knowledge that I am
    and that fluttering in the rain washes everything clean.

  • Changing

    She weeps
    and listens close.
    The doctor whispers words
    she cannot hear, but understands.
    She breathes.

    At home,
    the trailing vines
    do more than hide
    her childless, shame-filled arms.
    They give

    desire
    to see things grow.
    She digs and sings her joy,
    and patiently she waits for rain
    to change

    the shame
    and bitter tears
    to cheer and sprouting seeds.
    Among the blooming, twilit night
    she sits

    beside
    her grief and pain.
    She smiles, her gardeners’ thumb
    on full display among the blooms.
    She kneels

    beside
    the trailing vines
    she digs, she sings her joy
    into the blooming, twilit night.
    She weeps.

    *This poem is a garland cinquain for those that are interested in that kind of thing.