Category: poems

  • My Stubborn Teacher (Poem)

    I still say “tea” with the same guttural “chrrr” that you used

    And count the seconds to steep it using my fingers and my breath.

    When I chant, I hear your lesson on the downward emphasis

    Of “shok” at the end of a line in a Tibetan prayer.

    I find books we studied a long time ago reappearing on my shelves.

    You’re far away in another land in a home that I refused.

    Yet I find that you remain with me, as you said you would.

    Do I even want you to go away?

  • Immigration (Poem)

    What did she hear on the journey?

    The flame’s roar consumed everything that could burn.

    The soldier’s laughter made a mockery of joy.

    Her mother’s voice would never again say the blessing for taking challah.

    Her father’s whispers; the creak of the sodden ship; her silence.

    At Ellis Island the raucous seagulls wheeled overhead and cawed.

  • 1034 Vangautier Road (Poem)

    You will find the house empty

    Front door swinging on a rusted dream

    Kitchen table cluttered with broken hopes

    Furniture dusted with faded memories

    Not mine but others

    I did not take anything

    I left nothing of value

    I travel light

  • Walking Down Main Street (Poem)

    do you walk differently, unsure, unsteady

    not knowing how to gauge the space between

    do you stumble on the rough silences

    but fear to reach out a steadying hand

    family neighbors friends guests once

    so memory insists, a probable illusion

    I still offer greetings returned with sharp stares

    And sometimes such hostility that I’m forced off the sidewalk

  • Who I Am (Poem)

    Not the applauded figure that everyone wants to hear.

    There are enough of those,

    And I do not have a good loud voice.

    But the small person who lingers at the edges,

    Picking up what the listeners leave behind.

    The discarded flyers the illusions they wished to abandon.

    The crumpled snack packages the food they found unnourishing.

    The paper cups the empty dreams they hoped to fill.

    Carefully I place these in the designated receptacle.

    As I walk back to my room, I ponder them with a sigh and a quiet laugh.

    This is a very good life.

  • Sweetness Comes After Tears (Poem)

    Hands busy with chopping

    Suddenly stopping, knife in midair

    Hearing a soft voice murmur with laughter

    Throwing the onions in a sizzing hot pan

    A gnarled hand gentle on my face, and the words

    Sweetness comes after tears

    All these, and I’ve no family.

  • The Ambulance Ride A Lesson (Poem)

    there with the stretcher

    a cane propped beside the door

    in bed

    fever-glazed, coughing-seized, weakened

    laughter at my slow crawl

    the ambulance bumping

    bewilderment over casual cruelty

    slamming doors

    faint words of thanks unheard

    a text

    a lesson

  • My Death In My Hand (Poem)

    He offers this as a gift.

    Black and neon green, it could be anime.

    Lighter than a ceramic cup, it could be a toy.

    The bullets make it real. They look like what they are.

    Good intentions unmasked; detailed directions to the grave.

    Black depression now armed stalks me through the back streets.

    Overhead the waiting raptors kettle as they keep watch.

  • Walls Are Hard. Words Are Harder. (Poem)

    I want to shut my eyes, to cry.

    I’m tired, wearied to my bones

    By conversations where I’m thrown

    Again and again

    Against the concrete walls of your expectations.

    I lay crumpled on the ground,

    My grief purpled by darkening bruises.

    The walls, once white, are bloody and stained.

    Where do you look, when you turn away?

  • The Price Of Rain (Poem)

    When we were children, did we know

    That the sound of rain would shred our hearts?

    Rain falling like tears, heavy with grief.

    A grandmother disappears under the pillaging waves.

    A pink dolphin dies on the shores of a lake.

    A terrified mother stifles her baby’s thirsty mewls.

    All we can do, we who have rain,

    Is walk unprotected to bear sodden witness.

    Still we turn away when we pass on the street,

    Lest we see reflected in another’s eyes such awful knowledge.

    How shall we go on?