• What We Do With Time And Space (Poem)

    What do we do,

    When exploding stars used as clocks

    Prove that the universe expands?

    We need not chart the exquisite tick of quasars

    To know that time dragged slower in the past.

    We judge this by rapid heartbeats

    And the quickened sprint of passing days.

    What do we we do,

    When irregular galaxies stand revealed

    By lonely clouds and dark tendrils?

    We need not travel atmospheric parsecs in the vast

    To observe these circumstances.

    We see them in saddened eyes

    And the weighted drop of tiring shoulders.

    Perhaps such knowledge of time and space

    Can allay our fears and sorrows.

    We are not unique after all.

    We shrug off that burden and rest with all things.

  • The Dance Around Me (Poem)

    Love and friendships are mysterious indeed.

    I am walking in the dark and often fall over the gravestones

    That are etched with the friends and relationships I’ve lost.

    I’m no sage and possess not even the wisdom of a fool.

    In these areas I am a child still, gazing in wonder

    At the elaborate movements of the dancers around me.

    They step and turn with practiced abandon but seldom do they stumble.

    Yet sometimes one will stop and turn to me:

    “I need your advice, please.”

    Astonished and usually bewildered, I haltingly speak a few words.

    Truly though, I prefer to say nothing. I’ve no idea how to caper so.

    I’m doing well to walk.

  • Da Bei Style Tea (Poem)

    When you have gone,

    I shall drink only aged tea

    Grown wild and crafted with careful intent.

    I make my first cup but forget,

    Lost in thoughts of you warm beside me.

    The tea forgives my lapse of attention,

    Made from leaves that hold the thread of time.

    I cradle the warm cup in my hands along with my grief,

    Each sip tasting of dark earth and rich love.

    Do not go just yet.

    Not yet. I am not ready.

  • I Was Watching The Moon (Poem)

    Everyone was watching the fireworks.

    Multicolored bursts that sparkled the sky.

    I was watching the moon.

    A reproachful orb burdened by eons of witness.

    Our lives pass in an instant,

    So we take such joys where we can.

    A silvery road appeared before me.

    I looked back at the gathering and listened,

    The rockets booming over threads of conversation.

    Silently I set my journey and stepped

    Onto the shimmering invitation.

    Would my heart follow?

    Small matter. It was not ever mine,

    But only borrowed.

  • The Door (Poem)

    I approach the door of the sky.

    I knock but it does not open. It is closed.

    Like your heart. Like my eyes. Like any sense of hope.

    The clouds deny its existence, as I cry out for it to stay.

    I fall and hit the ground, only to see the door above me, opened.

    My bitter tears form a river

    And all below is washed away.

  • This Is Not That Heat (Poem)

    Outside it is hot.

    But not like the heat I remember

    From childhood when I lived in another place.

    There the air would hang still and expectant,

    As if waiting for cooling winds which never arrived.

    When you tried to breathe,

    Each breath would coat your mouth with sticky warmth,

    As if trying to inhale a sweltering blanket.

    You would hear repeated as a mantra of protection

    It’s not the heat but the humidity!

    We all knew it to be a lie but said it nonetheless,

    As though from our lips to some deity’s ears

    Would cause pity to result in an icy breeze.

    And after the temperature reached a certain point,

    We would not care which deity answered.

    I think if any passing demon had promised the equivalent of airy AC,

    Everyone would have agreed and offered their souls on the spot.

    But this is not that place, and I am not sorry.

    I can still go outside in the late afternoon

    Without soaking myself in my own sweat

    Or worry about heatstroke from checking the mail.

    I’ll stay in the mountains.

  • Because He Was Not A Turtle (Poem)

    In futile effort, he bent his back into a rounded shape of a turtle,

    Imagining it hard as that shell hiding all he loved.

    But it was not, and he cried out in grief, collapsing under the weight of loss.

    He realized at last that to hold back tears is to hold back time.

    He could do neither, and it crushed him.

  • Fire And Tea, Every Morning (Poem)

    Fire is burning around me.

    The air vanishes, consumed by smoke.

    The very ground crumbles beneath the heat.

    I sit calmly in the early hours,

    Gazing into the morning mists.

    I sip a cup of tea as I read Ha Jin.

    Which of these is real?

    Both. Neither. One. The other.

    See what you want.

    I will not choose for you.

  • The Heart Of Listening (Poem)

    Listening is an art I wish to learn.

    To hear beneath the words of others the flow of their life

    And what they hold within that rhythm.

    But also to float on the surface of their meaning

    And catch the gleams of significance thereupon.

    Will this knowledge startle my mind

    Enough to kindle new understanding?

    When we sit together in silence,

    Will the unspoken conversation continue?

    A susurration from our common heart

    With no bruit to indicate disease?

    Yes. I hope. Yes.

  • The Game Being Ventured (Poem)

    In each fist I hold a stone.

    I open my left hand and let the stone drop.

    It is white but in its descent

    Turns three times, changing to black.

    I open my right hand and let the stone drop.

    It is black but in its descent

    Turns naught, remaining black.

    Before they strike the ground, each transforms into a bird.

    The left stone a raven, the right stone a dove.

    The raven is the color of sunlight.

    The dove is the color of the midnight sky.

    Each flies to alight on my face; each plucks out an eye.

    Having been Cassandra, I now walk as Tiresias.

    Though I had never struck serpents

    Nor foolishly judged a heavenly duel

    Nor even glimpsed an owl unfeathered,

    I am blinded and transformed

    Yet still possess the unfortunate gift granted me originally:

    I speak true words but am not heeded,

    My voice lost beneath the mocking laughter from the sky.