Posts for June 18, 2023 (page 7)

Category
Poem

Astilbe

 For Isaac

              “Division is recommended” 
                                    –       Almanac.com
  

Stature isn’t everything
but if one of us leans
a head on a shoulder

you’ve overtaken me.
I still remember you
twenty-one inches,

in my arms, amid the night
cholic & crying
til I carried you

outside, under the stars—
the way you peered
silently into the sky.

For seven weeks
I’ve been lost
& you’ve been wise

words & strong shoulders,
holding my forty-three
years & change.

Gone for the summer, but
you’ll return
& one day soon you’ll go,

for the good
of a separate life.
Please

know your goat’s beard
dad will always be
proud

of today
of tomorrow
& here for you.


Registration photo of Lisa M. Miller for the LexPoMo 2023 Writing Challenge.
Category
Poem

Is This A Haiku?

His name? Watch your back:
Garden Asshole Anarchist
Wrecking Ball Chipmunk.


Category
Poem

DON’T CALL ME, DAUGHTER

You are all prodi-
gal daughter. You leave and re-
turn, repeatedly.


Registration photo of Carrie Carlson for the LexPoMo 2023 Writing Challenge.
Category
Poem

Handkerchiefs

For Dad
 
They were red
And paisley-patterned
Except on Sundays 
Then, they were white
 
They were used as
Snot rags
Blood blotters
Tear collectors
Dirt erasers
Sweat swipers
And funny adornments 
For two creative kids
 
New and stiff
Or soft, tattered, and worn
An abundance of handkerchiefs
Could be found in his dresser drawers
And always, one in his pocket
 
To us, those swaths of fabric
Seemed almost magical
But, the magic was in the man 
Who carried them
 
It was his work-worn and calloused hands
That reached deep into pockets
To administer the remedies
And carried those rags 
Not just for himself –
But for those he loved

I can still recall
Tearing my hand on the gate
The blood, the tears
And the red handkerchief
That made them all disappear

 
The tie that bound our family together
Was a paisley-red cloth 

Category
Poem

Quartier du Gros-Caillou, Paris, France

I awoke in France,

an interior of shabby chic decor with a variety of plants
I glance,
and notice how in and out of balusters on the staircase vines dance

becoming both common and commonplace was romance,
colors that luster putting me in a trance;

powder blue and pale pink to enhance

je passe une bonne journée (I’m having a good day)
I leisurely walked down the Champs-Élysées

after stopping by a cafe,

that was near the Airbnb where I stay

bichon au citron, the pastry of the day

on the champ de mars I lay,
I had never visited Paris before in May


Category
Poem

The Man on the Bus

I met a man on the bus
The doors opened and among the throngs of  people
he appeared as if from another age
Dark grey wool suit, fedora, black wingtips
Dapper from afar, but as he got closer

I saw the shine on the suit where it had rubbed up
against other peoples lives
Saw the frayed threads on the right sleeve
where his watch marked the passage of time
Noticed the scuff marks on his shoes

He sat across from me, his lower lip moving
his right hand trembling slightly
I smiled and he moved to sit next to me

And we talked in a halting liturgy
of English and Spanish and gestures
He was on his way to the florist to get
a bouquet to put on his wife’s grave

His wife who died in childbirth thirty years ago
Whose grave he had never visited
because he’d gone back to Mexico with his baby, 
his son, his only memory of his wife whom he loved

And now he was back
back to place flowers on the grave
of the woman he loved and to mourn
the death of his son
buried in a grave in Matamoros

I pulled the rope for him, and he got off the bus
and we moved on


Category
Poem

haiku 18

dad’s final soft years
eased decades of strict harsh
my mindset challenged   freed


Registration photo of Laverne Zabielski for the LexPoMo 2023 Writing Challenge.
Category
Poem

She’s Your Daughter, Too

Dear mothers
who have lost their child
to heroin,
keep a journal
write to her
with love in your heart
breathe, deeply
very deeply
drive around searching for her
if it makes you feel better
practice meditation
employ prayer
garden
create
endlessly.


Registration photo of Samuel Collins for the LexPoMo 2023 Writing Challenge.
Category
Poem

Idolatry

When you bang your toe and cry “God damn it!”
You call to Me.

When you clasp your hands and hope to Heaven,
It is I, ignoring your prayers. 

Your tithes go uncounted. Your sacrifices rot.

When you wake in the morning
It is because I allow it.


Category
Poem

Ten Anagrams For “Dimed Out”

When Yolanda first set up her law practice, it was outdoors
On a street corner in Covington, summer, nineteen sixty five, fifteenth and Byrd
Had a duo temid truck seat up against a brick wall under an awning
Had a do I muted phone booth and a card table
Was her meid to do office. Tod Diuem prominantly displayed

I asked her: “Demit, dou drive a Caddilac but live in a shack
On the back side of the Licking River flood wall, why is that?”
“Cause I was raised there. my Mama lives there,
Waitin’ for me prayin’ for me down by the — wait, that’s a different river
And to your point, I can live in my car but I can’t drive my house”

Then she asked me: “Mut I eddo you know.
You really want to do dat to me?
Let the boss know I been skimmin; on the take?
Them pit bulls is mine and I take what they make in the ring
De doumit.”

She deftly picked a dime from amongst the change on the table
With her sausage sized thumb and finger
Fitted the dime into the slot on the phone booth
“Do de tumi and you be dimed out.”

Slammed her fist on the table so all the nickels amd dimes and casings
And poker chips and broken teeth jumped. 
Then with her big clown smile: “We clear.? Else you find yosef in time doud.”
She pushed the plunger on the phone, retreived the dime
We shook, said: “UT MOID!”