Rain Poem





I recorded a poem last night 
A poem by nature

After a too-bright
Too-hot
Too-sticky
July day

Came the rain poem
Punctuated
With thunder and lightning 

Softening
Cooling
Breathing
God’s grace
For our garden

To See God





To see God in others
Is spectacularly easy
As long as I carefully chose
Whom I look at

With some, it is hard NOT
To see God
Woody, Wendy, Norma
So many close friends
My writing group
My meditation group
God is so easy to see

But also

That panhandler on the corner
With the cardboard sign
Impossible to read
That scruffy panhandler
Maybe, according to many friends
A con artist
I see God shining through him

Or is it
Possibly
That I merely see God reflected
In my easy generosity

That tantruming toddler
Embarrassing his mother
In the aisles of the grocery store
I see God in her and in her mother

Or is it 
Possibly
That I merely see God reflected
In my easy compassion

My often complaining mother
Who calls me at 10:00 at night
On her cell phone
To tell me her phone isn’t working
I see God in her

Or is it
Possibly
That I merely see God reflected
In my easy acceptance

But what about my troubled step-daughter
Middle-aged
Still needing her daddy
Desperately
His money, his help, his support

What about the needy young friend
Who lived with us for a year
Whom we supported through
Recovery from the trauma of COVID nursing
Who left angrily the first time
We needed a boundary

I blew it

I yelled at both of them
Ugly hurtful yelling
No generosity
No compassion
No acceptance

No reflection of my own goodness
In which to see God

Help me, please, dear Goddess Mother
To see You in them
In their neediness
And even in me
In my ugliness

Meditation

Silence is not silence
Until I slip below thought

My thoughts
Are often troubled
Wind whipped waves
That drown
Possible worlds

Beneath the swallowing waves
I sink into the cool quiet depths

I find a rock to cling to
Strange that 
I do not need to breathe
I do not die
Nor do I grow gills
I simply sit
In the dark cool depths
Holding onto the rock
The rock that keeps me still
Keeps me from floating back up 
Into the never ending storm
Hurricane tornado tempest cyclone
Of my thoughts

Thoughts that create and destroy
Faster than I can grasp
Thoughts that drown me
In impossibilities

I cling to my rock
Not as in psalms or hymns
My rock is not God
Because that requires thought
And thought is the world killer

So I sit quietly in the cool depths
While worlds of thoughts whirl overhead
I neither breath nor grow gills
I neither believe nor disbelieve
I neither create nor destroy
I sit in dark stillness
Resting against my rock

Ashes, Ashes, All Fall Down

My anger burned hot
A sudden flare

One too many lightning strikes
Burrowed into the underbrush
Of my willing heart

One too many lightning strikes
Hit the tall trees
Of my good intentions

Smouldering underbrush burst
Into heaven-bent flames
Where bright burning treetops
Met them
In an all-consuming white-hot blaze

Now
Days later
Blackened with soot
Eyes watering from smoke
I bend to read the ashes
Hoping for hope

Remembering Gordon

**Twenty years ago today my husband, Gordon, slipped deeper into a coma. He died at dawn on July 5, 2003.**

The poetry prompt births an ear worm
“These are a few of my favorite things”

And with that worm 
My mind burrows deep 
Into the rich darkness
of the song that Rodgers wrote
For the film version
After Hammerstein was dead

Often gloomy, depressive
But so incredibly talented
He wrote music and lyrics 
Of the gazebo song
“Something Good”

That was the song I sang to Gordon
As we drove to the beach
For the last time
Just a month before he died

Arwen
Who hadn’t yet decided
Her life was better without me in it
Was in the back seat

We shed no tears as I sang
But we all knew we were each crying
Into the silence after I softly sang the last lines
Out of tune, and with wandering notes, no doubt
As I am no singer

Into that forever beyond now silence
Arwen said, “Oh mom”
Gordon squeezed my hand
I leaned my head against the window
And kept my eyes on the road ahead
To the beach and beyond

A possible interpretation

This morning, as usual on Sunday, I read the prescribed readings for the Catholic liturgy. And I reflected on these lines from Matthew 10:37-39

Whoever loves father or mother more than me is not worthy of me,
and whoever loves son or daughter more than me is not worthy of me;
and whoever does not take up his cross
and follow after me is not worthy of me.
Whoever finds his life will lose it,

and whoever loses his life for my sake will find it.

And I wonder if these lines might be rewritten for our times and culture as

“When your ego is invested in your past more than in your now, you are not at rest in divinity;
and when your ego is invested in your future more than in your now, you are not at rest in divinity;
and whoever does not accept spiritual darkness,
as Jesus did, is not at rest in divinity,

Whoever treasures their ego will lose their true selves,
and whoever loses their ego in divine oneness will find their true selves.”