Monday, September 9, 2024

Spend Time in a Field

Leave the gate open
as the crescent moon 
hangs low in the west.
Walk slowly on the path
past the pond
to the place you planted
sunflowers, cosmos, and zinnias
in May.

Though the pumpkins and butternut
have all been eaten by the ravenous whitetails,
the flowers have unfolded and the palette of purples,
pinks, yellow, and red glow radiant
as the light fades into fall.

I walked with my son into this field tonight
gathering armfuls of the happy faces of blossoms
into bouquets that will shine something like joy
into each of the days of the coming week.

Careful not to wake the occasional bee
curled into the petals we have picked, 
we speak in reverent voices,
considering the trials;
the most common chaos
where God has forgotten the dust
she left in the corners
of anger, disappointment,
and the doubt of grief.

We stand together, silent
listening to the way night 
opens the door
with barely an effort
or flicker of force.

Sunday, September 8, 2024

Morning Pages

Two broad-winged hawks
I spotted and tried to identify
in the green bird book,
perched in the dead branches
of the maple
nearly out of sight,
just at the edge of the field,
absorbing the heat of the morning,
just at the edge of this summer.

The grey squirrel's
staccato movements below
were just what the menu required.
Heads turned deliberately,
knowingly not giving away 
their superior location.

It is slightly cool in the chair 
next to the desk
in the dim light.
The season has turned me
to the larger mug for my tea
and the warmer red robe
the children bought 
as an offering for my birthday
nearly twenty years ago.

From this perch
I can see the overgrown weeds
and cherry tomatoes dropping
in the diminishing garden;
the black-eyed Susans
drying on the stems
and fat marigolds
in all their puffed-up glory.

The clatter from the kitchen
and shuffle of old slippers
will not distract me
from these morning pages
while I watch twenty-five turkeys
gather, parade, and cluck 
content and oblivious 
to my admiration.

Friday, September 6, 2024

Three Drowned Mice

 
In September
the rodents move in
from the grasses and sunshine
to the spaces between the walls
and floorboards,

carrying seeds and looking 
for crumbs from the toaster
and the occasional ripening pear 
or red tomato on the kitchen counter;
a prune under the edge of the oven.

Last night I trapped them,
drowning three
in a bucket in the basement.

They were not blind.

They used their quivering noses
to find the pasty peanut butter
on the can over the barrel
and fell
to their watery 
deaths,

never to chase me in the night
with their scratchy scurry again.

Not one to ever nibble
through the crusts of the sourdough,
poop in the cupboards near the cups 
and unsuspecting saucers,
or shove seeds into the toes of my sneakers.

Human 3, mice zero.

Wednesday, September 4, 2024

Better Sleep Is On The Way


The sales girl tells me
she is the daughter of a dairy farmer
who died when she was four,
her mother never hugged her--
never.
"What's the matter with you?" she said
"Your mother hug you too much,
or not enough?"

How I miss my mother,
the way she smiled
when we greeted in the morning
with a song or like old friends 
hugging tightly.
The memory of her strong
and careful little fingers on the lids
of my child eyes
as she gentled me to sleep.

"Better Sleep Is On The Way"
is the ordinary tagline of the mattress store 
in tax-free Keene, New Hampshire.
Bea hands me a medium pillow,
and a paper doiley to keep 
my braids from the fibers of the fabric
between petite me and each trial of comfort.
Too firm, too fancy, too expensive,
too bouncy, too plastic, too cold,
until we narrow it to two.

The mattress back home,
nearly twenty years my companion,
is older than any marriage or time 
with a trusted lover.
The dip under my left hip
and the collapsing edges
have urged me to endure the banter
of the Providence accent
that has likely never 
stepped foot on any farm.

"I'll take this one." I whisper in apology.
She has mercy on me.

Free delivery
and they will take away the body
filled with mites and skin
and all the stains of too many nights.
Guaranteed for ten years.

She hugs me,
calls me Honey,
offers me a butterscotch candy
on my way out.

They will deliver
next Sunday.
I will be ready 
for the call.



Monday, September 2, 2024

Red Riding Hood


Last night I woke,
voice stuck in my throat,
choking and tears unstoppable.

A shadow of a girl was climbing
into the bed with me
to spit into my eyes
and my open mouth.
Unendurable fear
of her angry saliva
damaging my innocence,
unstoppable.

My arms paralyzed,
body trapped,
I groaned awake 
apologizing to the sleeping household
for my disruption of the peace.
"I'm sorry. . .
I'm sorry. . .
I'm sorry."

My heart awake,
the mind wandered to the woods
and the wolf
where good little girls 
in red hoods
doing good things
get off the path,
only for a moment,
and danger consumes them.

Sunday, January 7, 2024

Snow (finally)

 Snow (finally)


It is quiet and fresh
like it is only when it snows 
fat, fluffy snowflakes finally arriving 
in January
after Epiphany.

We all wonder 
knowing this is way too late
to wassail
and sing love songs
toasting the trees,

but after the collection of floods
and the heat of summer
we take this miracle 
and hum to ourselves
like perfect amnesia,

welcoming the silence
like monks
on a Christmas morning.

Suddenly, my skittish cat yowls
outside my bedroom door
shivering from the exile of the night.
Her rooster ritual
shakes my limbic core
as she intends.
I throw off the comforter,
pausing my pen,
to give her acknowledgment
and access to my cell.

Satisfied with the return to routine
the feline purrs, then leaps,
onto the window sill to observe,

marveling at this swirling meditation,
answered prayer for substantial winter,

somehow, 
a common revelation
in this unusual time.