Category: poetry

  • Such Gifts As She Gives (Poem)

    She sleeps beside me,

    Moving in tune with her dreams.

    I rest my hand on her side and wonder

    If she knows how with each breath,

    She measures my world?

    Before she came into my life I had no heart,

    only an empty space filled with a few jagged memories.

    With her arrived love,

    And I stare into her eyes with wonder and awe.

    Every day we toss the heart that she brought

    Back and forth in the air with joy.

    I’ve come to know

    That it is not mine but one shared.

    Our time together is precious indeed,

    And I want to cradle each hour close.

    Instead I hold these moments with an open hand,

    A lesson she has taught.

    In such acceptance of time’s flight,

    Eternity rests.

  • Watch For The Fool (Poem)

    The fool capers through the festival’s throng

    Reaching into their multicolored bag

    Throwing out thick black clouds heavy rain drops gossamer rainbows

    People frown in confusion gasp in wonder smile in delight

    They reach down reach out reach up

    Some gather these hold them close and run

    Lest they be asked to share their treasures

    Some stand still raise their faces and enjoy

    All this new raiment as happens to fall

    Some join in join hands join together

    Saying here

    Taste this stratus listen to this droplet feel these hues

    The fool jumps into the air climbs into the sky

    Claps their hands disappears into the rent

    Glitter and ash rain down

    The sun and moon become one

    Laughter echoes across the world

  • What Happens When We Wait (Poem)

    We are all waiting

    Breathing at different times

    In different rhythms in different ways

    With each inbreath we inhale the world

    With each outbreath we create anew

    In the pause between are all possibilities

    A god turned swan chooses to take flight rather than ravish

    An assassin turns the gun on himself and war is diverted

    An artist becomes successful and 6 billion lives are spared

    And also

    A child learns to skip amongst encouraging cheers

    A man chooses a caress rather than a blow

    A woman drops her clothes to stand revealed

    People of other gender other view open their eyes to freedom

    What did happen what can happen exists only in that moment

    Breathe yourself and consider these things

  • What I Do With My Heart (Poem)

    I stand in the middle of the field.

    The morning sky above is clear and unclouded,

    With the grass still wet from dew

    And the birdsong playing from the trees.

    I raise my hand above my head

    To offer to the warming sun this:

    My heart torn from my chest, bloodied and beating still.

    Here, I give this freely,

    Rather than have it wrenched against my will.

    I say this with a scream. Or is it a whisper?

    I open my fingers and release it.

    It falls to the ground and rests there trembling.

    I turn and walk away, not looking back.

    It will be carrion for the flesh eaters

    And even its decaying stench will dissipate.

    No regret, this is what happens.

    (What? Were you expecting it to transform into a bird

    And fly away?)

  • A Clap Of Thunder (Poem)

    The deep tone of a singing bowl fades away.

    A man lifts his head to hear, exhales, and is no more.

    A woman pauses her moans, inhales, and gives birth.

    The rain falls steadily, and this road flows with water.

    Death juggles skulls, as reality itself fractures and cracks.

    All below, hand in hand, dance in and out of life.

    The wheel of sharp weapons turns, turns, and turns again.

  • Dirt (Poem)

    I cannot measure this suffering.

    The distance from my outstretched arm to my nose tip

    Does not suffice,

    Nor can I hold it cradled in my hand.

    At times it fills the entire world,

    Though I know that it is just a speck of dirt.

    Let me throw it to the ground,

    There to join all the other debris,

    The gathered soil of wars, famines, and plagues

    But mostly the common loam of everyday wear.

    Life after life after life this is what remains,

    Yet we return to dig again in the muck.

    In ignorant wonder we hold up our muddied hands,

    As if we have no memory that this earth is part of us.

    My tears leave black streaks on my face,

    And I cannot catch myself as I fall.

  • Death Meditation (Poem)

    Lay down on the verdant hillside.

    This is also a grave.

    As you spread out your limbs,

    Light runs from your fingers and toes

    To intertwine with tree roots.

    These glowing threads bind you to the earth,

    Together with sun’s slanting rays

    Filtered through the branches overhead.

    Beneath you scarabs move in the dirt,

    Tapping down a deathwatch

    With a promise to turn your bones to gold.

    Fear not and still your mind.

    Death and life are one and the same.

    A soft breeze flows over the grass.

    Bird sing their melodious song.

    This day will never end.

  • Troy (Poem)

    The air hangs still and silent,

    Suspended in the heat of the afternoon.

    It feels like the dog days of August,

    Though the first day of summer has yet to arrive.

    I sit in the shade on the hill, close my eyes, and listen.

    I hear the distant stamp of armored feet,

    The rattle of sword and spear against shield,

    And the rhythmic chant of warriors’ song.

    And I know: the Achaeans have arrived.

    The wind briefly stirs

    And brings the coppery scent of blood,

    The drifting remnants of ash from sacrificial pyres,

    And the faint threnody of women’s cries.

    The ground beneath me shakes as Troy’s walls collapse.

    Rising, I become aware of a passing train.

    The sky has clouded over, but the scorching air persists.

    The goddess’ wrath echoes in each step I take,

    As I walk home to have a cup of tea.

  • Pride (Poem)

    They caught a glimpse

    Of our rainbow-hued world

    The way we breathed more easily

    By being here together

    How our eyes reflected the glitter of drag

    In irridescent tears

    How our voices threw off the ever-present caution

    We assume in other company

    How our laughter bounced off the walls

    While we danced through the night

    How we wrote our stories in bright chalk

    When we knew they were temporary

    (They walk over them the next day

    To erase our words as always)

    This is all we have, an evening hidden by careful description

    A morning hour carved from someone else’s time

    A piece of pavement borrowed from a storefront

    Still we remain

    We are here

    And we don’t care if you get used to us

  • Remedy (Poem)

    Birdsong pours through the morning

    Drenches every tree and bush.

    The ink-dark remnants of the night

    Stars and bits of forgotten dreams

    Transform into rainbows and glimmers of hope.

    Laughing, we open our hands

    To catch trilling notes from the flow,

    Hiding these away in the hollows of our hearts.

    For who knows what troubles the day might bring?