Sunday, December 7, 2014

Tuesday, October 14, 2014

Wednesday, October 8, 2014

Three Happinesses: Part Two

You’ll get no happy ending, and neither will I.
Bad drivers, bad haircuts, bad milk,
our lopsided loves, blown chances,
being too much and not enough.
All the hurts of age (my knees) (your hands),
the suicides of friends.

Whatever ever after you will get
is not one happiness, monolithic,
but many small ones:
a baby learning to laugh.
Bread baked by your mother,
and later, her recipe,
a sacrament.
A sudden mouthful
of kisses in the elevator,
or one tender kiss in the morning
as you’re shaking off a dream,
one that turns into your husband’s eyes,
soft with love in a rough face.
A friend’s voice.
Music.
This.

Monday, September 29, 2014

Three Happinesses: Part One

I know how it is. Darkness
seems more honest than daylight,
when we shuffle our hearts
to the bottom of the stack,
brew coffee, match socks, clock in.
If I tell you my happiness
I must be leaving something out.
So I write to you of griefs,
nakedly. But while you are
licking their salt from your lips,
somewhere that you are not looking
a songbird is taking a breath,
opening its mouth to sing.

Sunday, September 21, 2014

Rockabye Baby: The Remix

My little sister was born when I was a teenager. I was so excited to sing lullabies to her. However, once I began to sing the classic "Rockabye Baby," I was horrified at the words, which I'd never really noticed as a child. Since then, I've heard a lot of other people express amused horror that our favorite lullaby depicts a baby falling out of a tree. So I thought I'd share the alternate words I made up as a 15-year-old. The tune is the same, of course, although I did add a few more syllables. Sing it aloud a couple times, and I bet you'll get the gist.

Rockabye baby, in the treetop
When the wind blows, the cradle will rock
Hear the tree whisper in the soft breeze
Sunlight is falling through all the leaves
A brown birdy sings you a lullaby
Now fall asleep, out under the sky


Enjoy!


Thursday, September 11, 2014

River-dreams

The river, she dreams of oceans,
of shallow ancient seas,
Paleozoic, of losing herself
before she carved these cliffs
from yearning. Her river-dreams
rise up from the canyons
and hang here in the branches,
pearling the early world
with water, oceans in air.
Muttering in sleep,
she runs the red of an old wound,
returning to the sea.

Wednesday, September 3, 2014

Synonyms for Anger

The sunlight at noon:
hard, flat, and without mercy.
A bright blade against.

Thursday, August 28, 2014

Your Childhood is Imaginary



Nowhere you’ve been can be home.
The paper façades
of last week cannot hold you.

Monday, July 21, 2014

Timekeeping


Your focus is absolute.
Your sticky fingers cup each apricot, giving it a gentle turn
to find the blush of ripeness. You have not seen the thundercloud
that’s slumping overhead, grumbling with the weight of rain.
The bird calls halt into an urgent stillness. In that hush
the pears become pendulums, the flagpole a sundial,
and Time slides by between canal-banks.
I barely keep from leaping in to gather up the water to my body,
to pile it and hoard it, anything  to hold on to your babyhood,
which has left you while I wasn’t looking, swiftly as the apricots
that ripen overnight.     
Already my memory fails me.
 I know that when I’m older it will wash away
and leave me clutching only silt and this:
a photograph of you at nearly four

running through an orchard in the rain. 

Sunday, July 20, 2014

Storytellers

We are the dregs of the civilized,
the afterbirth of ego;
loitering professionally in libraries,
alchemists of metaphor,
the most artful of liars.
Is a paper offering worthy?
For the makers of stories
are the keepers of all the world’s brothers.

Thursday, July 17, 2014

Embracing Chaos

Today's blog topic (hi everyone! I've been gone awhile because I just had a baby) is inspired by a quote from a friend of mine, Enrique Pina, who told me once, "You need rabid foxes and craziness unicorns in your life in order to make sense." He meant that each of us must find a way to face and even embrace the frightening and the absurd, lest their unacknowledged presences warp us. I do this best through writing poems, although trying new and risky things (like skydiving a few years back) helps me explore what frightens me, and interacting with my small children helps me embrace the absurd.

Readers, do you make a conscious effort to do these things? If so, what are your methods?

Tuesday, May 6, 2014

I Am Not Your Tender Flower



I am a weed.
I did not ask your permission.
If you withhold the water,
I will wait for rain.

Do not walk barefoot
across my arid earth.

Thursday, May 1, 2014

30/30: The Things You Thought You Needed



Those golden slippers will not fit you
after your feet callus from  gravel.
Your amulet to save you from witches
was hasty; it nips at your dreams
like papercuts, now that you’ve
started hoarding white sage, eyebright,
and rosemary. And all the men
on white horses that pass through this town
are looking for women sleepier than you,
who prefer their kisses stolen, not given,
who wake only to promises less pedestrian
than a dog’s warm lick and the thought
of sausages on a cast-iron pan.

Monday, April 28, 2014

29/30: The Blue Boat



Our tenants, the neighbors,
have purchased a sky-blue boat.
We live in the desert,
it has no propeller,
and they have skipped the rent.

From my window I can taste
the salt spray off the Eastern coast.

28/30: What You Gave Me



The best memories involve some blindness.
There’s a reason we close our eyes to dream.
Nightfall, or in this case a matte white mist,
your finger’s point, a hush, a fog-gray fox
who felt invisible beneath our oaks.

Each night, the stories, the self-respecting epics,
nothing with the stink of grade school on it,
another last chapter, until your eyelids drooped,
slowly turning your own words to dreams
as we held in our collective breath.

Dozing in our clothes, waiting for the moon to set
so we could match the punched-out patterns
in empty tuna cans up to the autumn stars.
With handfuls of constellations, we felt
big enough for joy beneath that vastness.

You neglected your yardwork but made a maze
through the head-topping subtropic grass.
We lost each other by flashlight each night,
hoping if we lingered long enough,
our bedtimes and the daylight world of baths,
neat lawns, and back-to-school would fade
like tired fireflies, our mother
would give up calling us and live a life
of clean quiet houses and grownup chats,
and we’d be left to grow shaggy and wild,
to live on berries and the smell of earth.

For my father

27/30: Blackface (Small-town Texas, 1990s)



In our town, there were several types of houses.
Historic homes, with scrollwork under eaves.
Ranch-style, siding or brick. Easter-egg pastels
in neighborhoods where words became palabras.
And over the railroad tracks, where the weeds got taller
the houses got smaller, the paint chipped,
and all the faces on the front porches
were black.

When I was eleven my homeschool group (white)
performed a play about the Underground Railroad,
in blackface. The audience (white) loved it. There was
a newspaper article with proud photos (black and white).

While we waited our turns to go onstage, we swiped
fingertips on the arms of a painted friend, laughing that
when we were little, we thought black skin really did rub white.
After all, “flesh color” is beige for bandaids and pantyhose.
One girl said, I licked a boy in my kindergarten.
I thought maybe he tasted like chocolate.