Dressing in the dark in winter clothes
I turn on the coffee to a rising death toll.
Under stay-at-home orders and weeping skies
I need a haircut and larder supplies.
Jigsaw puzzle spread out on a table,
piece by piece I construct a town.
Tulips, groomed grass, and houses that house people.
Lecture halls and libraries and bustling alehouses.
Bartenders with white towels wiping down bars,
Cracking jokes and drawing pints in a fairy tale land.
With writings and books and time for it all
I should be content but I miss my pals.
Linked up with Earthweal and the weekly challenge,"Flattening The Curve".
To date in America there are 183,000 cases of Covid-19 and 3,774 deaths, a sobering number as it doubled in two days.
"Two wrongs may not make a right but a thousand wrongs make a writer.”
Tuesday, March 31, 2020
Saturday, February 22, 2020
A Writer's Life
I rouse the cat from his house
with a thump on the roof
He stretches his double-thumbed feet
and emerges from his bed.
I fill his dish with Rachel Ray's
premium blend and he follows me
out to the chicken coop.
The water is frozen.
Inside the chickens are warm
and the trough is dry and empty.
They titter totter down the ramp to the outdoors
with straw stuck to their feet
(those feet that make a healing broth)
and I scatter feed and fill the water as the cat watches.
You take care of your animals before you take care of yourself—
childhood admonishments stick in my head
as things from childhood do.
Part and parcel of this adult package
I would be less without.
Once orphaned we all take our seats
at the adult table. So I fill my coffee cup
sit at an empty table with a blank page
and think about what I will write today.
This little walk through morning chores is linked to Earthweal's open link weekend. Sunday, remember, is a day of rest, even for farmers, writers and environmental activists!
with a thump on the roof
He stretches his double-thumbed feet
and emerges from his bed.
I fill his dish with Rachel Ray's
premium blend and he follows me
out to the chicken coop.
The water is frozen.
Inside the chickens are warm
and the trough is dry and empty.
They titter totter down the ramp to the outdoors
with straw stuck to their feet
(those feet that make a healing broth)
and I scatter feed and fill the water as the cat watches.
You take care of your animals before you take care of yourself—
childhood admonishments stick in my head
as things from childhood do.
Part and parcel of this adult package
I would be less without.
Once orphaned we all take our seats
at the adult table. So I fill my coffee cup
sit at an empty table with a blank page
and think about what I will write today.
This little walk through morning chores is linked to Earthweal's open link weekend. Sunday, remember, is a day of rest, even for farmers, writers and environmental activists!
Labels:
Chickens,
Malcolm the cat,
The Writing Life
Tuesday, February 11, 2020
Wranglers, Whiskey and White Socks
The mustachioed cowboy
with grass stains
on his knees
plays the slide guitar for me.
The barmaid fills shots,
the whiskey flows,plays the slide guitar for me.
The barmaid fills shots,
wranglers, white
socks,
a band of four.
a band of four.
Mustache in a
Stetson
bends over the keys
bends over the keys
feet work the
pedals
smiles for me.
smiles for me.
Sunday, February 9, 2020
Feeling Small in a Multitude of Ways
If
the sky were any bigger it would kill me clean.
like
an iceberg into the melting sea.
The
sun colors the sky best before it breaks dawn—
each
wisp of cloud a red kite on a string.
It
enhances the tree clinging to life, to its last wind-torn leaf
like
a child to her mother through the fence of the king.
It’s
bigger than a barn from afar, that tree
limbs
full of birds’ nests unraveling in a breeze
and
I don’t know how it escaped the clear-cut of the king.
Too
lazy to have walked through a field of grass
to
stand under a tree, the vast sweep of its shade
and
pay homage to that which is braver than me.
Too
cowed to lobe arrows at the wall of the king,
my
capacity to feel small is undiminished
by lies
as the sun travels its arc across a blood-splattered sky
and
I finish out the day in a multitude of small ways.
Humbly offered for Poets and Storytellers and likewise for Earthweal, the weekend open links for writerly laments.
Sunday, February 2, 2020
The Hungry Boyfriend
lounges in the
recliner with his pressed coffee and remote,
top
shelf at the ready, knuckle in his mouth.
Only the best
for the double negative boyfriend
who loves her
and promises he won’t do it again
but he’s always so
hungry, hungry, hungry hungry.
Curtains drawn, super
heroes on the tube
he waits for her
to come home with food.
A high-flying career
guy who now pushes carts in the rain
it isn't any wonder he's hungry for her.
He gobbles up
friends and eats self esteem
devours her cash
like a casino machine.
Lock your phone
with a thumbprint, sleep with a knife,
when a double
negative boyfriend sneaks into your life.
But she tells all
who will listen he won’t do it again,
not nothing to
worry about from this DN boyfriend.
He’s calm and
connected, swallows his pills dry,
hitches his
pants and polishes the knobs,
patiently pacing for the mouse to arrive.
But she did it
again and ruined his mood
empty handed up
the walk, bitch where’s my food!
Thursday, January 30, 2020
Assault on a Dove
A
flock of birds swoop down the road
in
the face of a churning, tireless blow
skittering
the ditch, they flutter and spin
to
stay in sync with their fine-boned friends.
Pellets of snow fly in opposing drift
unlike these
birds who would flock together
if
only they could. They circle the house looking for calm,
break
apart and converge in the shape of a crown.
One
lone dove drops from the sky
like a plumb line to my porch and hops chair to a chair
butter soft gray, dusting snow off her feet,
like a plumb line to my porch and hops chair to a chair
butter soft gray, dusting snow off her feet,
she rests on a cushion out
of the wind
and tucks her head neatly under her wing.
Rising temperatures have a major influence on wind speeds. This has been especially noticeable here in the Great Lakes Basin. According to a study published in the scientific journal Natural Climate Change, winds across much of North America, Europe, and Asia have grown faster since 2010, and the speeding-up trend is expected to continue. That's good news for renewable energy production and could be a boon for the wind power industry but brings an added risk to birds.
Researchers
estimate that up to 328,000 birds are killed every year in collisions with the
blades and support towers. But back to the affect high winds in general have on
birds. The ability to land is critical, especially for fast-flying birds. High
wind is an assault and particularly dangerous to cliff-breeding birds. It can
prevent them from accessing their nests through loss of flight control.
Wind trumps fossil fuels, hands down, but solar trumps wind. No creature likes
windy days, least of all birds.
Labels:
Climate Change,
Earthweal,
Sherry Marr,
Wind
Tuesday, January 21, 2020
The Wildling Sea
the
boy who cried wolf,
we
drink our coffee
and
read the funnies
as
the dune grass clinging
to
the eroding slope—
the
barrier between house
and
the wildling sea—
gives
way.
This poem is in response to Earthweal's weekly challenge for the "Global Commonwealth of Earth" and the theme of water. And d'Verse 's Wild Mondays Even since I first wrote this, part of M-25 along the Lake Huron shoreline is in danger of falling into the lake due to unrelenting rain and gale force winds.
This poem is in response to Earthweal's weekly challenge for the "Global Commonwealth of Earth" and the theme of water. And d'Verse 's Wild Mondays Even since I first wrote this, part of M-25 along the Lake Huron shoreline is in danger of falling into the lake due to unrelenting rain and gale force winds.
Labels:
Climate Change,
dVerse,
Earthweal,
Poetry,
Quadrille,
Wild Mondays
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