"Poems are forever floating through my mind and if I don't catch them pin them to the page they are gone forever and what good is that?"
~ My journal (age 14)

Tuesday, October 4, 2011

Leaf canoe

Leaf canoe paddled by the breeze
on a lazy voyage downstream

had it fallen on the wet earth
the journey would be over

but the cool water beckoned
and so a new adventure begins

in a season when most
have already succumb to decay

the small brown paper-thin star
has made its frailty an asset

the dry curled edges are better suited
for skimming over the waves

than when they were plump and green
and heavy with the stuff of life

now free of the bulky branch
it is content to lie back and float

String Theory

Here's how I knew I loved You:
at the sound of your name
my every atom began to hum
vibrations of a tuning fork struck
deep within the cavern of my chest
and all at once I understood
that I am made up of so much more
than I could have imagined
in the silence before We met

Tuesday, September 20, 2011

prayer

take my many wants
balled tightly in my fist
pry each finger loose
and shake them out
like cold ashes
leave me empty-handed
that I might grasp
what is true

Sunday, September 11, 2011

Red Cups

I was always the girl at parties
holding the same red cup all night
uncomfortable as a sunburn under denim
watching the Munchian faces scream-laugh
at some joke I could never understand
feeling all the more outside for not wanting to

Who are all of these people?
Did their dads ever tie dental floss
around their loose teeth and slam the door?
Have they ever cried over
the bare bones of a bird in the woods?
Would they hold their breath
to hear the gentle breeze better?

How I wish I could dump out
this warm waxy brew sitting stagnate
in my super-sized red plastic Solo
and fill it with cool soft mountain water
how the hint of ancient earth thrills my tongue
how just the thought of it quenches my soul
in the barren desert of this over-full house

Power outage

So this is how they did it
for almost all of human history
flickering fire alive in the night
thoughtful dinner by candlelight
soft conversation by the hearth

Electricity has made
chained children of our nights
shouting, yet unable to move
as we watch still, flat screens
instead of the dancing flames

Monday, September 5, 2011

How to survive a hurricane

Two frightened dogs, two overfed cats,
one fearless husband and you --
huddled in the concrete basement
taking refuge on the fold-out couch
the one that smells like neglect
the one that feels like a rock quarry
the one that you can't believe
you've allowed guests to sleep on
or at least try to sleep on
you now know that it is not easy
especially when the wind outside
is trying to crush your house
like a Coors can on a frat boy's head

You've never been a beer drinker
and yet for some strange reason
you begin to crave one now
but don't dare go upstairs
for fear of falling trees
and exploding windows
like you witnessed on the local news
just before the power went out

Of course, without electricity
the beer is probably warm by now
and warm beer is not good anytime
much less at a time like this
when the end feels so near
besides, you would never choose
a pale summer ale for your last drink
before your darling red cottage
was carried off into the murky grey

You would choose a Wildwood cream soda
the kind you could only get
from the magnet-covered fridge
in the tiny yellow and brown kitchen
at your Nana and Papa's house
the kind with the bright sky blue can
covered with vibrant green trees
friendly upright pines
not the broken and hurled maples
thrown like javelins by an angry Irene

And suddenly, having chosen a last drink
that could only be obtained
if you were to travel across the country
to sleepy Highland, Indiana
and then across time to the early eighties,
you begin to feel calmly confident
that you will survive this storm after all

Wednesday, August 24, 2011

For Papa

What a marvel it is to me
that the hummingbird
with its minuscule proportions
should remind me of my papa
who as a baby slept in a shoebox
but as a man could scarcely find a bed
long enough to keep his feet
from hanging off

What an enigma it is
that a shimmering insect of a bird
calls to mind the mill worker
who moved steel for a living
with bear claw hands
and hard helmet nails

What a mystery it is that I can see
the slow moving gentle giant
in the zig and zag of an avian wisp

And yet, when it flies overhead
the flutter of soft wind on my hair
reminds me of his cheek
resting on the top of my head
the glint in its iridescent feathers
is the wink in his blue eyes

Nothing can rival the hummingbird heart
save that of a hard working long loving
proud Slovakian whose hands
were large enough to hold forever
whose heart is light enough
to float on the breeze of eternity