Friday, December 31, 2010

3.

connecticut soil is made of rocks.
when we used to dig to make way for the tomatoes,
we built ourselves castles from the rocks.

granite ontop of granite
for peaks and glory and i am the princess.
i am the glory girl.
there were even enough left
over to build the hedge which came
right before the moat
and the draw bridge that
is only let down after a
collection of magic words
spun together is said with his eyes.

they used to call me repunzel.
the used to comment on my hair
blonde and long and strong
and wonder who might climb
up that braid
and crawl over the crown of my head
and up and down the mountains
and valleys of my ear
and into its drum
and suddenly inside.

they used to wonder who might have the strength.

Tuesday, December 28, 2010

2.

(a poem a day
becomes not quite a poem a day
when there are no poems
running through the day.)

Sunday, December 26, 2010

1.

i hope-
i hope that you meant it.
i hope that you meant it when
you said that you forget -
when you said that the east and west
could not touch
and neither could your heart and my dust.

i am covered in dust.
i am covered in sin-dust like layers
of skin-dust scratching off with my fingernails.

i am itchy.
i am itchy from sin
get me out of this winter
get me out of this easy
get me out of this body that's covered in skin-dust
that so easily knows where to go and how to find it.
i hate it.

bathe me.
send me into the ocean
and sink me under
and pull me out and
clean me.
use oil and rose hip and
consecrate me.

i hope.
i hope that you meant it.
i hope that you still mean it,
that you still want me,
that you still mean it when you said
are faithful.

Thursday, November 25, 2010

i will love you until i don't anymore.

Thursday, November 18, 2010

it seems that the closer i get to going home the more i ache for it.

you left a hole in me, you carved it yourself.

Wednesday, November 17, 2010

, easy girl

there seems to be such a continuous going until the final command to stop. i long for the heavy hand gripped on my shoulder, easy girl. when the heavy yokes weigh too much, i cast off the lightest one first. easy girl, slow down.


, easy girl.

Tuesday, November 16, 2010

how can we do anything else?

we talk in whispered wishes
late at night
when we remember
that some of what we invested in
must die.
like seeds planted and
turned over
in hopes of a newer, fuller crop.

we sowed in love
and we are reaping in regret
because the returns will
take longer this year.

and, really, what it might mean
is that we lived in hopes of life
and are having to reconcile death
in the midst of it.

and how can we look at the death of love
and keep our hearts from dying too?
how can we do anything else?

it is when

it is when the air is supposed to change
and instead of cool breezes
and i sit in the sun, too hot.
it is when i wish to be cold
that i wish to be warmed
be someone other than myself
and the lonely sun.

it is when i am not home,
for the first time i am not home,
to see the seasons change or
to feel the holidays advance
on us like soldiers,
window after window,
that i wish for my own -
that i am aching for my own.

it is when i am tired,
when my thoughts
and spirit are sinking
from the weight of independence
and higher impossible seeming dreams,
and a terrible loneliness
when i am tired of on-guard conversations
that i regret.
that i wish you were waiting to greet me.

but, brooklyn is not paris.
brooklyn is not paris.

Monday, November 15, 2010

I am a woman waiting for her lover to come home from the war.
I nest, creating a space for him to come home to.
In this perfect rearranging I am trying to woo him home,
to convince him that I have grown up,
that I am ready now.

Tuesday, November 2, 2010

unmoving.

i spent the day unravelling.
unpacking.
undoing.
unmoving.
i spent the day inside the same four walls.

i spent the day in stillness carefully laying
memorized mementos in their proper place.
my home travels with me.
no matter where i am there is a hummingbird and
there are red beads strung on the wall.

i feel old in this place. i feel treasured.

settled, settling in,
i am tired of the past.

i look up to my map,
the line drawn across it.
this is where i came from.
this is where i went.

i am tired of the past.
for now, i am here,
it is of no concern where i was.

the eastwardly mountains
and westwardly sea enclose me.
i stand still.
i do not desire to be anywhere else.

Tuesday, October 26, 2010

California

Those that call California young
have not met California.

Those that scoff at the plastic faces
plastered on all of our advertisements
have not met a farmer, seen the lines on his face,
nor shaken his hand missing fingers.

Those that call California young
have not met California.

She wears her age in her dirt.
Old vine Zinfandel growing for 100 years,
evergreen oak tree's roots reaching deep
into the soil and the brick.
Even her roots look like bark.

California wears her age in her dust
circling us and settling on antique hearts.

And I sit and pause on her piers,
looking out onto the rocks the take the
beating of the ocean.
And I wonder if when the Spirit, resting on the
earth without form and void,
if he rested longer on this place.

So carefully, oak trees look like fathers
poised on the rolling hills -
our protectors.
So gently, hills look like mothers
guiding us home -
our comforters.

Those that call California young
have not met California.

The earth is so old here it makes me
wonder if we even belong-
intruding on sacred spacial history.

Sunday, October 24, 2010

everyday i think about leaving with greater reluctance. who knew all this could be so amazing. who know it was just what i needed.

roots growing.

gentle man.

with all of the kisses i
regret not giving to your
perfect pink lips hidden
underneath the layers of your
gentle beard comes this:

one thousand i love yous with every breath.
one thousand i love yous i longed to pour over you
with one thousand i love yous.
and i was always holding them back and holding my breath.

and this i learned:
a true gentle man is known by his beard.

Monday, October 18, 2010

pins and needles climbing through my spine.

i cry out.

healing. please bring your healing.
"Madame, I answered, even in this world, the slightest thing, a mere stroke, can make us cease to know the people whom we've loved best of all."
- the diary of a country priest.
let me love you, that's all i'm asking you.
let me love you.

and how you didn't know i leaped
and agreed yes
and how you didn't know all my protests
were paper walls for you to knock down.
challenges.

how we failed.
how i could have submitted to you in all the vastness
of that word that i do not understand.
and how you could have loved me in all the ways
that took too much out of you.
love, in such ways, exhausts.

and now, the grand disconnect.
submitting to the iron rules that i have submitted upon myself.
and how unknowing leaves every uncomfortable movement
left to know alone.
and how many thoughts drift towards your knowing,
and remember,
they cannot be acknowledged without a fight.

and what a miserable scene,
when such an experiment of loving
turns so bitter.

(and i make no apologies for being so vocal and wearing so many hearts on my sleeve. i make no apologies for hearts spilling over into open-air life. this is life. we live it. these things are so mixed-up-hard in my head.)

only truth, it is that saddest thing to unknow you. i sat today, aware of the saddness.

unknowing may just be the opposite of loving.

Sunday, October 17, 2010

james is coming.
a single man.
an arm around me.
a single woman.
friends to see.
so much life is always happening.
we fight.
we would love if we didn't fight.
we would love if we didn't fight.
we fight, still.
we fright from lack of love.
i am going.
a single man.

Wednesday, October 6, 2010

i want all of my words to come true in my heart.

Sunday, October 3, 2010

Comfort

This is one of the nights that I slide into music
like I am sliding into beer.
And I sit atop of my bed, perched,
waiting for the words to come
as I am sliding into feeling.

And this is one of the nights that I imagine laying next to you.
My neck always fit so perfectly in your arm.
And your warmth made January easier.
This is one of the nights when I am cold.
This is all for comfort's sake.
This is all because I want some comfort from so much sleeping alone.

Sunday, September 26, 2010

this much i am beginning to learn:

i have perhaps never loved a day in my life.

or, maybe slightly more accurate,
and perhaps a bit generous as well,
there probably haven't been more than ten people
i have loved in a fashion worthy of is name.

and, from this realization comes another,
i have no idea who he really his,
or what love looks like at all.

Friday, September 24, 2010

you. you. you. you. you.
more. more. more. more.

YHWH.

less. less. less. less.
me. me. me. me. me.

pure heart. clean hands.
pure heart. clean hands.

Joshua.

simple heart prayers.

Monday, September 20, 2010

grace.

I've got six minutes to write.
and then i must get up and keep going.
going, going.

i wonder, this morning,
how peter, james, and john
felt sitting at the bottom of the mountain,
bewildered,
as their beloved wept on top of the mountain,
in agony.

i wonder if they were ashamed of their ignorance.

i wonder other things too:
how long did it take for the woman behind the line
to break her promise,
"go and sin no more?"
how many minutes from his kind eyes
to her next relapse into the
life she taught herself
by routine and such steady practice:
five husbands and a couple of lovers.

i wonder these things as my eyes
well up with tears thinking that
his mercies are new every morning,
that his kindness leads me to repentance,
that I have taught myself rebellion for twenty-two long years,
and now I am tired.
and now I see grace in submission,
so much so that I would wear a scarf on my head
if it would beckon you to come faster.
if it would woo you into my heart
to replace my cavities with gold.

so lovesick, am i, that I might just do anything you asked me to.
though your simple request to
go and sin no more
seems more impossible than all the rest.

and for this, i pray grace.

"Then give me grace to rise and follow Thee up from this misty lowland where I have wandered so long"

Saturday, September 18, 2010

at the end you run towards me.

i remember the first time your foot touched my foot.
you place yours upon mine so gently,
as though you didn't mean to,
though you tapped to a rhythm so very gently.
as if to remind me that you were there and i was near you.
the reminder served me well.
it was, perhaps, the first time
that i thought you could be a man
and i could be a woman.

by the end i knew what kind of a man you were
and what kind of woman i had become.

and now there are times
when i wake up with anxious fretful breaths.
i was running towards you and away from you.
passing, as quick as i could in front of you,
yet, afraid.
you pay no mind.
she put it into simple words,
i was as if i was leaving and wanted you to notice,
to be upset,
even to say goodbye.

and today i was in california ontop of a mountain
and he whispered,
at the end you run towards me.

Wednesday, September 15, 2010

i am waiting.
you keep telling me this is good.
it is good for me to wait.
as long as you wait with me,
i will wait.
even for you, my Lord,
even for you I will wait.

(but, if heaven tastes anything like your presence, take me there now.)

Tuesday, September 14, 2010

jesus loves paris and paris will love jesus again!

jesus is a faithful lover and paris is another israel who will return to her groom!

jesus is a faithful lover who has not abandoned his bride! he has not abandoned his city!

jesus is the light and he belongs in the city of lights!

this is what i spend my time believing for.
his love is not so weak, he is not too weak for paris.

Saturday, September 11, 2010

paris,
you are still so deep in my heart, i cannot get you out.

named by you

i cry out in whispers,
carve out space inside of my heart.

in the moldy and rotten caverns,
in the dark places stained
with bitter memories and
so much remorse and so much anger,
in the places of shame that
covered me with impurities
leaving me to question
whether or not they chose the wrong name
twenty two years ago,
in the feeling of hands where they do not belong
that come back in the phantom nerves
i cannot seem to forget.

carve out those dark places,
and clothe me in your holiness.
and i will look like your daughter.
and i will walk, named by you,
pure and innocent,
katherine.

Wednesday, September 8, 2010

a sinner's anxious prayer.

this isn't about doing more,
acting more good.

this is about i am sick with sin
and i need you to rip out my heart
and give me your gold one
so i can be well.
so i can be healthy.

i am sick with sin and your gold heart is the only antidote.

(and come quick! i am wreaking havoc and i do not know how to stop. i do not even know how to repent. i only know how to ask so weak please give me a new gold heart and a new bone spine to walk like you do. to love like you do. my fingers and my toes have walked away even all the while my eyes were longing for you.)

Tuesday, September 7, 2010

i count it a failure, how few times i kissed you.
all the while, it was all that i could think of.

Sunday, September 5, 2010

if only your fingers and toes could follow your speech around.

what a man they'd make out of you, all headed in the same direction.

Tuesday, August 31, 2010

tomorrow is september 1st.

a day rich with meaning only two people know.

i will not be going back soon.

Monday, August 30, 2010

there are punches thrown in sleep.
and yelling and yelling and yelling.

where's the justice in shattered images?

(yesterday, he said he could work even this for good. even this anger. even this anxiety. even this troubled soul that's afraid to go home for fear of his eyes. what will they see this time? what will i? the reflection of an other woman, something i don't recognize)
i'm not ready yet, i don't think.
so much sorrow, still,
those streets not being what they were only three months ago.

i'm not brave enough to go back without shaking in my sleep.


--

this may be the first autumn without any red.

Sunday, August 29, 2010

in the simplest way i long for home.
to come home.
to be home.
to find a home.
to settle.

new york, i wonder if i will see you this october,
leaves blazing one last time before the end.

Monday, August 23, 2010

i must live in thankfulness

holy spirit energy running through my heart.

life is so good! there are so many good things here! so much! so much!

i must live in thankfulness, or else i might collapse from all my fleshly fears and anxiety and heartbreak. i like in thankfulness of the hills and the gold and the fog and the holy spirit energy running through my heart.

Sunday, August 22, 2010

fog

the fog, the fog.
this is what california is like:
in the mornings i wake up with the sun shyly saying hello.
the fog, on the way to work, covers the hills and
everything is like a tapestry,
covering the hills in chiffon,
with lights shining so sweetly behind.

i see the fog and i think of him.
i wonder what its like see him shrouded with glory
and shining and so magical.

its peaceful in the morning,
before we remember all that we're supposed to be.
the fog and the sun and all its shrouded glory.

its like the Lord lives here,
behind the mountains,
just close enough to catch his scent,
to see his shadow.

Wednesday, August 18, 2010

finishing a novel, finishing a friend.

i read stories written so old and i hear in them my heart. there is comfort in jo's passion and her growing wisdom. comfort that this season of alone, though i chose it, will not always be. so funny, that stories can read me so clear. and i wish to part with trust in Goodness. it is over and i remember why it i hold it so close. older now, my lips tremble at the tender troubles of four little women. i know those troubles well, and hope that some do not come quickly to my feet. she said goodbye to her dear friend and found a more humble joy. i too, wish for the sweetness that bestows a woman in love.

Monday, August 16, 2010

a confession

i have not looked into a man's eyes and felt love for a long while.
though, i have loved the still glances they give me.
amazed that such a woman might bestow such attention,
they watch from behind their glass of wine
as if fate has favored them and Aphrodite is here.
they gaze, and occasionally i match it,
carefully securing their hopes.
my Lord, i have been a liar.

Thursday, August 12, 2010

‎(I will build you up again and you will be rebuilt, O Virgin Israel.)

Wednesday, August 11, 2010

and the L-RD says come away with me. and he sings over me a pure and holy song. and he tells me i am good and i am his.

he quotes jeremiah in my ear, The people who survive the sword will find favor in the desert; I will come to give rest to Israel. I have loved you with an everlasting love; I have drawn you with loving-kindness. I will build you up again and you will be rebuilt, O Virgin Israel. Again you will take up your tambourines and go out to dance with the joyful. Again you will plant vineyards on the hills of Samaria; the farmers will plant them and enjoy their fruit.

and i learn to trust the promise of the L-RD, in the desert, forsaking all others, learning to love him.

and i, like the Virgin Israel, will again dance with the joyful. and I will be rebuilt. and he draws me in with loving kindness. for, i am just like Israel. i am just like Gomer. but, i will be redeemed. i will wear grace upon my head, like a crown made of wildflowers.

(and he knows just how much i like wildflowers)
today i struggle to say that it's okay.

Tuesday, August 10, 2010

i have so many my friends binding themselves to other friends.

i sit smiling.

i wait for great love.

ever changing.

sometimes i wish to call you to remind you that i am still the same woman you met a long while ago, only, i have shifted and moved underneath the tide.

my heart, like sea glass, is evolving. ever smoothing, ever changing.

these mistakes that i make that you take so hard only end up as lines in my glass. and, as i am ever changing, ever smoothing, i expect one day you might look at them as a thing of beauty.

i wish to call you to remind you that once you looked upon me as a thing of beauty. though, i don't hope for the return of things past. i only hope that memories will be remembered well, that we might smile upon one another and nod, knowing, resolving.

you, though, do not want such reminders and you nod with your head dropped low. and i know i broke you. and i know i must leave and continue to change, ever so slightly, smoothing and evolving into a woman.

these days i hope for grace. to deserve the name woman. to wear it well on my head, crowned with forgiveness and beauty.

Friday, August 6, 2010

simplest prayer

walking through the streets in the sunshine, she often prayed her simplest prayer. she did not intend to pray so often, these pleas merely slipped out in subtle sighs. she did not like to put paint on her face or hands. she knew nothing about smoothing out her hair. she wanted to look as pure as an open field. she wanted to look so pure, the feeling might seep into her heart. she walked down the street and prayed her simplest prayer: "I want to be pure. I want to be kind. I want to be good." If she could be good, she would be the loveliest girl even without any paint. she so earnestly hoped that one day she would be good.


Tuesday, August 3, 2010

one day we won't remember all of this.

Saturday, July 31, 2010

and i laugh

this is not so much a poem as it is a way of life.
there are simple things that i am noticing.
the pace of life here is slower,
men are more humble,
women more beautiful.

it is as if they all know, almost instinctively, it isn't about them.
(these growers cannot will a vine to grow. these women cannot will the sun to shine)
they are all so dependent upon the earth.

and this world is different than the world in new york city.
where everything grew tall there, here we talk about the roots that stretch deep.

and, i laugh.
on the back of a motorcycle, head stretch back to see the stars and catch the wind in my mouth,
i laugh.

Tuesday, July 27, 2010

Blancetville

Blancetville tastes like metal. My tongue grazes the roof of my mouth and along my lips, and I taste its distinct flavor. The faces here are sad and drained. There is too much iron in their skin weighing them down. We all feel weighed down as soon as we arrive, and we leave with lead in our hearts. Blancetville leaves us wanting. It’s easy to grow old here, even while I am very young.

Blancetville used to be a farm town, but there is little agriculture left. I wonder what the water has done to the land. The soil here is made of clay; crops struggle to take root and too often drown. When the rain comes, it puddles and ponds in fallow fields, and in the spring, just before it is time to plow, the dormant land on the outskirts of town grows wild with row after row of yellow mustard.

Daylight lasts longer than on the east coast. In the summertime night doesn’t come till nine or ten o’clock. There is something eerie in getting tired before the sun. We all try to outlast it, but we yawn into the sunset and stay awake just long enough to see the fireflies come out. The fireflies give us something to talk about. Something to hope for.

I can imagine my father growing up here. I can see him at six —sharp, independent, sly—riding around town on his bicycle, speeding past the long stretches of field that overwhelm the landscape, racing time to escape its toll. I see him twelve years old, golf clubs bound to the front of his bicycle, making his way to the junior country club to play a round with his pals. Or at age fourteen, coaching the Little League. It’s best to appreciate Blancetville through the eyes of someone else, someone too familiar with it to recognize its flaws, or at least familiar enough to forgive them.

We were there to visit. First my father’s parents, then my mother’s. It’d been a long time since I’d driven down the long straight roads. I learned to drive in this town, but once I learned I got behind the wheel and didn’t come back too often. There were too many other vacations to take, and I preferred roads in the mountains, places that kept me feeling young.

We sat around the kitchen table, drumming our fingers, waiting. There were five of us, each biding our time in different ways. Ethel made excuses for her son, and busily cleaned up after us. Randal, thankful this was not his problem, found ways to complain about it anyway. He may have married Ethel, but that didn’t make her son his. Debbie kept close to Ethel, coveting the rare time with her mother. My father and I left for a walk, hoping the time to leave would come soon. We casually placed bets on whether he would come at all.

Dean made his way in two hours late. I hadn’t seen him in fifteen years, and I looked him up and down with my critical New England eye. He sat with Debbie and Ethel, telling stories about his children, some of whom he hadn’t seen since his divorce. I looked for signs of myself in his face, but I could only see my brothers’ bone structure and gaunt build, my grandfather’s ears, Ethel’s nose. His hair, long and curly down his back, had dulled and greyed, but his thick mustache still burned. His skin freckled and tanned in the sun. There was no question he and Debbie were siblings, though the youthful joy in her eyes made her look the younger. No one would guess that she was the first, that she was ten years his senior. Dean wore time on his face.

As he talked I watched his hands shaking ever so subtly. He had short fingers like Debbie’s, but I’ve never seen a man with such thick fingers. His nails were longer than mine. I wondered what time had done to him. I wondered if he was tired from all that driving at night.

He tore at Randal's sense of propriety: “A mahn outta be’n contrul of ‘is huss,” Randal, ninety-one, mumbled and paced, disrespected by Deans hair. We first met Randal ten years ago, after he married Ethel. They had both been widowed. Ethel seemed to carry on fine alone, but Randal needed a wife to tend to him. There has never been another woman whose hands work in such precision. She is capable of nearly anything. In the old house, the red one she and her first husband built, she rode a lawn tractor to mow her five acres across her first lawn, down into the ditch of the creek, across the bridge, and out into the second lawn, carefully navigating around the grape vines. Then she made grape pepper jam for all of us. Her strength was always in her hands, in her deeds.

When the mower needed to be repaired, she called Randal. That is how they met. One day, in her garage, he looked at her and declared to himself, “I’m gunna marry that woman.” Three months later, he did. That was the one weakness I saw in Ethel: she was easily had.

Randal was old. In every way, he was old. And, for all of his purposes, he was always right. Ethel lost all of her freedom when she married Randal. We all knew she had the advantage, but he was the winner. Every winter, he came down with pneumonia and lay down, waiting for death. It never came. Every winter, Ethel was not permitted to leave the house; he could not stand the thought of dying alone. Sometimes, her guests could not stay. Sometimes, even her own children were not permitted to stay. Randal is so old he is even missing parts. When he was young he went to work in a factory, and at some point he lost two of his fingers on his left hand. This dominated my first impression of him. I reached out to shake the hand of this alien new grandfather, and my hand cupped too few fingers to understand.

I sat as a child in the midst of years of tension. Dean, oblivious to anything other than the memories of his divorce. Debbie, finally sitting across from her brother. Ethel, loving her children and appeasing her second husband. Randal fuming. My father and I caught each others’ eye. Comrades. Randal escaped in the other room to his chair, feeding bitterly on his oxygen. Unsatisfied, he came back in, stood at the door, then at the wall, then by the sink, and back to his chair. I could hear his breathing thick and loud as though he was underwater, slowly losing control.

Ethel excused herself. From the other room I could hear Randal’s indignation. The sounds were mostly muffled, but I caught the key words. Dean had long hair. He did not look enough like a man. Dean was not a good enough man. Dean was late and he had long hair. Randal could not forgive such crimes. Men and women each had a proper place. Dean was out of place. I heard Ethel crying, “They’re here to visit me!” Quieted, but undeterred, Randal sat back in his chair. Ethel came back, blocking all troubles, listening to her son. She knew it had not been easy for him. She wished the way had been simpler. We all wished that for Dean.

In the midst of it, I looked up at my father. He may always be a bit of a mystery to me. I imagine at his funeral he will be missed by all, but understood by few—he is known for his silence and his boldness. His silence has often been maddening to me; but I have found that he is good at both creating tension and resolving it. Some of my favorite memories are of him smoothing away my nerves and fears. I find the most peace in his authoritative, subtle interceptions. His voice and reason enter the middle of an explosive situation and defuse it. I’ve come to trust his calm.

And so I watched him. Almost without thought he got up. He walked away from us without a word, went into the other room, and absorbed Randal’s storm. And Debbie sat with her brother and her mother. And I thought, by all comparison, my father is a very good man.

Monday, July 26, 2010

i wish i had words.

the only promises of faithfulness found are written to Israel.

Friday, July 23, 2010

one thousand years old.

i saw your eyes and felt one thousand years old.
you, too, looked one thousand years old.
in them was my history and a future disregarded for older hopes.
i saw both beginnings and endings in that blue crystal,
your dark empty space staring into mine.
you read my history, and helped write it i suppose.
there are lines in these eyes carved out by you.

in such short breaths, we have tangled our tiny nerves in cracks and spaces;
lungs and ribs coming together from two different puzzles.
knotted, i leave and you come;
you stay and i follow.
we are neither there, nor here.
we are certainly not alone nor together.
we rip and break one another's bones,
adding more to replace what already didn't fit.
we are a bone pile, collected through these years.

such a long life to live in such a short amount of time.
you are my old soul,
and i, for a time, brought youth to your tired heart,
and you to mine,
until i could not take it any longer.
i, too, have grown an old soul.
i recognize life too well, though i have never lived it before.

you could not come, even if i asked you to.
there are the children in your heart to tend to.
and then there is this:
i can not be she whom you've dreamed of.
i do not belong in your dreams.

so i break your bones, give your old soul one more tear.
and you leave cracks and hollow caves in these lungs.
i look at those eyes and wonder how such a tender glance could leave such a hole.
but such a hole it left.

go now, make room for her. sweep out my dust,
don't save any in jars sitting on the window sill,
don't let her know what's written in those years, written deep in the cracked walls.
and i, too will go. i will run into the mountains, hidden, protected, healing,
quietly remembering those eyes.

Monday, July 12, 2010

with an army all around me i am as strong as the L-RD.
alone, i am weak and trembling.

did it take me coming back for you to leave?
did you need to go?
don't go, don't go,
get on a plane and rescue me.
get on a plane and rescue me.

Tuesday, July 6, 2010

carpenter

of the most impossible things there is impossible news.
and all of this shall pass and it will all be over within a reasonable time
until then, the impossibility of forgetting and remembering and wondering
if it was all the right thing to do.

and yet there is a bluebird in my heart waiting for a carpenter to build a birdhouse in an oak tree.
until then, i will sing you songs that make you think of all that you've ever wanted anyway.
until then, i will envy all of those other promises that almost sound like they are for me.

and i will hope that you are a carpenter who lives by an oak tree just waiting for me to perch on your branch.
and i hope that you will give me wings.

Saturday, July 3, 2010

and in the morning we hang our sheets on the line in the sunshine.

and i imagine that i am floating and there is nothing but light and white and pure laundry.

this is my favorite time of day.

Tuesday, June 1, 2010

leaving

it isn't all of leaving that's hard. there are only parts that hit my heart so deep and hard. the beginning - all of them lined up waving as i left. and where am i going? this is one of the hard parts about leaving. i'm not so sure where it is that i'm going.

but then it was easy again. mountains! mountains! friends, hope, prayer, release. there are so many places and faces here and so much to love. i picked her up and we laugh, we laugh.

the worst part about leaving is that i am always leaving. there isn't one decision and then its over. in every state i'm leaving and in every state i'm not turning around. there are so many people and so many hearts. and there are oceans on either side.

did we know that we would leave so much unfinished business? did we know that leaving would be so continual?

i didn't know, i didn't know.

Friday, May 21, 2010

summer music.

summer came today.
i could feel it in the roots of my hair.
i was warmed and
it seemed that in the sun my shield melted.

there has been a lot of driving lately
in preparation for the driving that will come.
and in driving and in listening to summer music
all of a sudden summer's emotions come flooding back.

driving route 84 east, i was not in connecticut,
but a different coastal state breathing the breeze from a different coast.
i had not thought of it with such emotion in a long while.

and i drove along,
alone this time,
with the same yearning and loss that music carried last year.
and i wanted those notes to carry you through my veins
and i don't think of it too often because emotions can be too strong,
and sometimes words fail, and i can't keep the chord long enough to satisfy.

but if i ever meet you again, i will tell you i finally understand.
the heart cannot be forced to fall in love,
even when it wants to,
even when there's a very good case to.

and, though it broke me a thousand times,
i understand.
it is difficult to think in poetry and prose at the same time.

Saturday, May 15, 2010

the space echoes in me.

the midwest.

i stare out the window counting field after field of mustard weed.
we drove and saw the earth turn over and over on itself.
after fourteen hours we stopped; still looking for a home, we stopped to rest.

what is it about the midwest that leaves me feeling so empty?
the space is too -- looking out, i feel lost.
for the first time in a year, i long.

this is nothing like a crowded city.

what do i use to orient myself?
words, people, time, place.
i am still looking for a home.

Saturday, May 8, 2010

graduation

after it was all over, she went back to the dishes. still in her antique dress, she scrubbed them to prepare for next time. that was always her impulse - draw attention to the forgotten and shrug off the ceremonious. she didn't know if it was admirable. she didn't know what it all meant. there was so much fuss for the end. rather, she wanted to know something really very simple.

had she done well? is she loved?

can she love?

and it seemed to her, as she scrubbed the last bit of counter top, that a 'Yes' would deserve accolades upon accolades.

Sunday, April 11, 2010

I woke up this morning with the words of a lonely man running through my head.

Tuesday, March 9, 2010

and in this way,
new york makes the world smaller.
there are so many people gathered
in such small places.

the world comes crashing in-

i go in search of a bigger world.

seasonless

seasons in new york change in a day.
there is no snow gathered in mounds
following my front walkway ,
leading me from the street to my home,
ushering me from the door to the fire.
there is no snow to indicate the passing of time
from christmas to easter,
from january to march,
from winter to spring.
there is no snow to remind us that we live in
days and seasons;
we live in time.

with the absence of the elements stretching from
one day to the next,
indicating continuity,
our days are isolated.
rhythm becomes the beat of the trains
and the horns of the cars,
but we do not understand that life passes
in seasons and in time.
that one day i will grow old like my mother is growing old
like my grandmother grew old.
that one day i will bury my lover in the field where we first lay
in springtime when our love was new.
I will lay him down again in spring, to mark the fullness of life
in the fullness of a year,
in the fullness of a season.
and one day, i will be buried underneath the field where i first conceived
a thought that i could love.

i do not know it yet.
there is no field here for me to go fresh and sweet to be undone.
there is no mark of death in this place.
only the steady pulse of the same age
for ages.
there is no labor to tell me that i must work for the food i eat.
only the steady pulse of tired hands and hearts.

and spring came in a day.
and will leave in a day.
and there is no more thought of winter,
there is no more snow to remind us what was,
and what will be.

Friday, February 5, 2010

Left untended, a broken heart leads to a dull heart. Scar tissue loses feeling. It is harder to worship without healing. It is harder to love without blood.

I want to worship & I want to love.

Thursday, January 28, 2010

Is is possible to ask for love in every movement and whim of my hand, and still run from it? even at the mention of its name, my eyes dart toward the door.

Monday, January 25, 2010

i stand with my foot in the door, keeping in ajar, saying over and over again, L-RD i will not forget you. Do not forget me either.

Monday, January 11, 2010

wonder.
truth.
love.
security.