((h/t Amy Schumer’s Gratitude sketch https://youtu.be/l5dTdaKdGG8) Thank You God for Most This Amazing poem by e. e. cummings I don’t want to write, inspired by it, But rather to read it again and again Until I sink, completely, irretrievably, into The quicksand of thanksgiving I want to smother in thanksgiving Forcing the air of trite, culturally now gratitude Out of my reluctant lungs Smother until I am forced to breathe in The gritty moist sand of thanksgiving The sand that drowns my lungs Forcing out the last molecules Of easy gratitude I almost kill myself Reaching reaching For the unattainable Illusory total gratitude Even as I sink further into This quicksand reality Leaving above facile gratitude Drowning in thankfulness Though there be no bottom No slide down into a starlit Infinity of universes To then whoosh through With all the skill of current CGI I will live I will learn to breathe in Tearingly gritty, tearfully moist Thanksgiving
Year: 2022
Faith
“The substance of things hoped for” As the garden sleeps with tender plants surrounded by piles of mulch He plants the bulbs that will bloom in the spring “The evidence of things unseen” Long after the flowers wither under early summer’s sun the tall slender leaves of daffodil, iris, hyacinth and tulip bear evidence of next year’s flowers
THE Soul
Poetry, I often try to think, Is a felicitous marriage Of perception and thought For better or worse For richer or poorer And not even parted by death Because Capital T, Capital H, Capital E Soul THE soul Not yours mine or ours Not even gods or goddesses Just THE (please, in your mind, always see THE capitalized) THE soul of everything Infinity in a grain of sand, to borrow shamelessly From one of those old dead white men Who were assumed for generations to be the only ones Able to express THE (all caps, remember) soul THE soul is so very different from a soul And yet, of course, a single soul is Every bit as much THE total soul as THE total soul is each single soul Which bring us squarely into the realm of Quantum physics Next stop, surely, is the illusion of linear time But the individual soul animating these fingers Feels the need to stop words and rest Quiet Secure In awareness of THE (all CAPS, remember) soul.
Memories of Music
The poetry prompt “What words of love surround you” Leads me quickly and inevitably (unlike John I love the unfashionable adverb) To “Words of love Soft and tender Won’t get you where you want to go” And soon I am not writing poetry But dancing in the streets With the Mamas and the Papas Even though Christine McVie (she of Fleetwood Mac, Not Mamas and Papas) Died yesterday Sadly and inevitably Dead To dance no more on this earth Except with worms, maggots and other bugs Until she dances again as a blade of grass Or a tree root or just rich dark loamacious earth Impossible that Christine would want A dirge: dance-free, song-less No, not that, but Perhaps a second line With colorful umbrellas Jazz dancing down the street Behind the brass band Memories of music Merge and twist together As though choreographed By Chubby Checkers Wrap me warm Bless my rhythm As my now old body Continues to dance
Gracelessness, Please
Dear Goddess, God, Divinity, Higher Power, Whoever I would like a favor, a blessing, a grace, a whatever Please I would like to do things badly Well not quite What I mean is I would like to not have to do things well Grant me satisfaction with imperfection (since that is all I can ever achieve, be) Let me enjoy the doing more than the done Amen, Namaste, Shalom, Blessings be, Whatever Oh, and thank you
Weaponized
Certainty has become a weapon Sharp and deadly Strident and unyielding Ah, I could fill the page With the certainties Of this, our time, our world But instead I think I will go lie in the shade Listen to the breeze in the trees Lazily let my eyes follow a falling leaf Yawn and stretch Close my eyes Enjoy my body And maybe even twitch my tail
Lost and Found
I found God rocking on the back porch as water fell from pitcher to pitcher to pitcher into our small - micro really rock pond Across the lawn I glimpsed the infinity of God in blades of grass burning bushes Carolina jasmine daffodil bulbs waiting to be planted Japanese maples old and new upright and weeping tall and small and our towering Norway spruce keeping careful guard as robber squirrels raid the garden There sat God with my husband so I quietly joined them to worship at the feet of our world
Learning
To learn the unwanted lesson To walk the uneven path To seek an unknown destination What lesson must I learn From estranged children Seeking their own world Needing freedom from mine I learn the hard lesson Of loving more And holding less What path must I walk Through light and dark Seeking my own God Needing freedom from others I walk the hard path Of believing more And knowing less What destination lies ahead As I stumble onwards Seeking my own divinity Needing freedom from depression I seek the hard destination Of accepting more And trying less
AweFull
My childhood was lived in awe Awe of God, our Father Creator Awe of Jesus Christ, His only begotten Son Awe of the Holy Ghost Three Persons in one God Awe of the one, holy, catholic, and apostolic Church Mostly awe of the Church Each parish church Cathedral-like, darkly quiet Each daily Mass Celebrated by the robed priest In millennial choreographed Latin The host, True Presence Received on the properly prepared tongue (By which I mean a tongue that belonged to someone who had gone to Confession on Saturday) No wine then, except for the priest The buildings The statues The candles The incense The pews The Communion rail The Repository Everything bejeweled Awe everywhere Awe enough to shout down questions Awe enough to shut down mouths Awe enough to wound, again and again And always, all around Just outside the triune God And His church Just outside Unnoticed Was awe enough for anyone
Leaf Rain
“It’s raining leaves” Mom is beyond the autumn of her life Living through the deep winter of loss Even those of us a generation younger Are now old ourselves Her world overflows with bad news Sometimes a drizzle As she learns of a younger relative Entering assisted living Sometimes a torrent Death, disease, disability Drumming a sad song On the roof of her mind Born and raised in steadily green Southern Louisiana She reacts with a child’s glee To Virginia autumn I thank Mother Nature For small blessings That make a 98 year old Sound young: “It’s raining leaves.”
