Showing posts with label poems. Show all posts
Showing posts with label poems. Show all posts

Monday, October 5, 2015

A Moon to Moon Experience


somewhere,
between the
Blue Moon and the
Super Moon,
life exploded

a game of chance

in one wild revolution,
the phases voiced a challenge,
"Listen humans, to my signs,
for I am moon"

cards, once close to the chest
flew tornadic into the air
with gusto, fury,
diamonds, hearts, spades,
clubs, all in a swirl,
gaining momentum, hitting their mark,
making a play,
or,
landing silently on the Summer grass,
love notes lost to an egg timer's heavy hand

a fools game

well before her queenship
disappeared behind the sun,
eclipsing for 72 reddened minutes,
her smile extending
into an incandescent grin,
a sign, doomsayers claimed
to mark the end

she, whispered,
"hush, you're okay,
look up,
the sky, it's still there,
punctuated by
black and mauve, gold and sapphire,
all colors at once,
and clouds, so many clouds,"

the game closed

players shifted,
whirlwinds settled,
cards landed where
they're going to lie,

and as poker faces brush lips
with the moon,
the orb absorbs their power,
new love,
strong, poetic,
ripe and tomato red,
there's no question,
no answer,

in one wild moon to moon experience,
the game changed,
and not by chance

Sunday, October 5, 2014

What Fresh Hell is This? Why Dorothy Parker?


I've decided to take an online  poetry course on Universal Class, and this is my first assignment. I've decided that posting the assignments on my blog holds me double accountable for the content. It's been a while since I've written about literature, so I felt a bit rusty, but it slowly became fun. Cheers!

------------------------------------------------

Many years ago, I purchased The Portable Dorothy Parker. Immediately, I noted how completely un-portable it really is -- the thing is huge! It requires an oversized purse or backpack if you want to take it along to read on the train or on your coffee break, and you certainly wouldn’t want to lug it around for too long. I think that’s Dorothy’s little joke, though. Her sense of humor is both delightful and deprecating, and it rings through even in the title of her anthology.

I’ve read a few of her short stories, but mostly I just adore those poems. There’s something refreshing about her style, and her pacing draws me in. She has a certain rhythm and rhyming pattern that much of my early poetry relates to, and a sort of humor my older self understands. While, a younger version of me relished in her love (or lack thereof) poems, it is her more philosophical pieces that strike me now. Take “Philosophy” (aptly named) for instance.

If I should labor through daylight and dark,
Consecrate, valorous, serious, true,
Then on the world I may blazon my mark;
And what if I don’t, and what if I do?

There’s something about this poem that rings true to me as an artist, and something about her “I don’t give a damn” attitude that rings true to me as a person. She almost always throws in that final zing at the end, which I also adore. For instance in “Indian Summer,” another favorite which appears just above “Philosophy” in my anthology. She ends with, “And if you do not like me so, To hell, my love, with you!”

I don’t know that I’ve yet mastered her gift of the zing, but I surely like to end my poetry, my films, and my writing with a bit of a twist. Here’s one I wrote during the National Poetry Month challenge two years ago after a disastrous cupcake baking experience.

Cake,
imploded upon itself
and
burning remnants,
remind me
I'm no Martha

Campy smells
and a snowy outdoors
coming in
to lessen the smoke
tell me
laugh,
don't cry,
sometimes smoke gets in
your eyes

And you forget,
it's a better memory

I’m glad Dorothy Parker left us with so many of her memories, lessons, quips, and stories. She took her miseries, and made her readers a little happier. I guess that’s what I always aim to do with my poetry – take my own lessons,  ideas,  joys, and pains, and make those who read my words a little happier by seeing they’re not alone.


Tuesday, April 29, 2014

29/30 - National Poetry Month 2014

this is my first desk,
         my first office,
         the first space I've ever had,
     to myself

its quirks,
in order of annoyance:

the air vent,
never quite right,
        quite hot, on occasion,
        quite cold, most of the time

the whirring from fans,
used to cool, but make my head shake
                                           shake it out,
                          makeshift sound barrier,
                                                   drown out
kind of
                         
the mouse cord, too short,
with an extension that beeped
                       that blundered
     mouse, busted?
           extender busted?
who knows

hidden away, in a,
and I quote "cave,"
         away in a corner,
like a misfit,
        misdirected,
                      corner pocket,
                                        bat cave.

In other words,
      this place,
      this space
 the first place,
      first office,
      first desk
I've ever had to myself.

I loved it.

Sunday, April 27, 2014

27/30 - National Poetry Month 2014

This 
  may or may not be relevant,
but...

I wear your sweater.

Its reanimation
   through repurposed wool.
Do you come to life on those days?

When your blue threads hit sunshine
   and apple blossoms, 
do you remember?

You like birds, I think,
   and cornflakes with sugar,
flowers, macaroni...

Its hard to remember. 

To me,
   you are photographs, journal entries, 
other people's fond memories... 

and this sweater.

You're tied to me,
   woven yarn, dye, family.

This may,
   or may not be relevant.




Friday, April 25, 2014

25/30 - National Poetry Month 2014

Stop,
   breath,
       there's plenty of time,
it expands
    or contracts 
to your frame of mind.

Slow it up,
speed it down,
take in the view,
sheesh... Just look around.

Believe, 
  for once,
the faster you go,
the less you do,
don't hurry,
there's plenty of time,

Stop.




24/30. - National Poetry Month 2014

#1

Red wagon weather-worn
Trike, long parked pink handlebar
There's a storm brewing

#2

Chit chat squirrel tease 
relies on meow cat food
the sky perfect calm

#3

Pudding snack lunch pail 
Lullaby rocking chair sway
This is the way home

Wednesday, April 23, 2014

23/30 - National Poetry Month 2014

The timeclock on this gig
expired long before she left,
rats in the wall tiles,
tires popped by force,
the mud and smoke and wine piss
stuck in nostrils

days, months, 
years after she waved adios

Is that what PTSD stinks like?
rotten corpses and rottener souls?

Breaking f'ing news,
shouted the powers that be,
a wind storm, a circus train,
bones in the creek,
Blizzard warnings? Don't heed them,
Crime tape, 2 a.m.? Rush to the scene.

Danger be damned.

Its for the people, by the people,
while from the people she ran.

Fire on the mountain,
rumors in the mill,
beep beep, shakes awake,
the alarm clock has five hours still.

Monday, April 21, 2014

21/30 - National Poetry Month 2014

she carried a 
robot hand in her pack,
a weapon against 
the whir of the world,
a plastic cast to 
weild when things got weird,
she carried a
robot hand in ber pack.

Friday, April 18, 2014

18/30 - National Poetry Month 2014

today.

another whoosh of colors and buzz,
a shake of a snowglobe,
a timer's half twist,
a tick mark on an ever-expanding list

days end.

like bare feet on a shag,
a sensation of unexpected comfort,
a palette fulfilled,
rest, to do it again

Thursday, April 17, 2014

17/30 - National Poetry Month 2014

The poet taught
words,
    within words,
        within words,
and the language of commas and line breaks.

Wisdom from ancient,
     recent,
forgotten, and forboding culture.

The poet caused their collission.

She writes --
    boundaries, be damned.

He wiggles letters,
    juxtaposes phrasing,
guffaws at the sound.

The poet spoke
language
    with letters,
         within letters,
and free verse breaks silence,
    forever, and ever.

Wednesday, April 16, 2014

Saturday, April 12, 2014

12/30 - National Poetry Month 2014

2 years gone.
FLASH! BAM! Zzzzip!

Just like that, 
  sometime between 25 and 30
it begins...

ZOOM!

Where you live,
   who you love,
the clothes drying over chairs

In a BEEP,
  a DASH,
a FLASH, BAM, Zzzzzip
they are different,

or not.

You are different,
   or not.

ZING!

Spend them well.

WHOOSH! WAVE! 

Note the pages.

2 more gone,
FLASH, BAM, Zzzzzip

Friday, April 11, 2014

11/30 - National Poetry Month 2014

red wine,
  sordid fantasy, hailed by pop-culure,
and kittens crowded sleepily 'round

a rare peaceful moment, 
    sweetened by knowledge
 that I won't repeat it tomorrow

Thursday, April 10, 2014

10/30 - National Poetry Month 2014

abandoned roadside,
   swept to the gutter,
garb, turned to garbage,
sole separate from soul

drive-by questions
   without time to truly note,
manufacturer
    or model,
size
    or condition,

who are these
   barefoot bodies
settled on sacrifice?

or,
   is there despair?

trashed by choice,
   tragedy,
   or jest

street-side shoes,
    laced,
for their last wear


 

Friday, March 1, 2013

Challenge 2: February - A Poem a Day #22

Nightmare-sparked power outage
breeds caterwauling
and siren chatter,
world sleeping,
unaware

Pierced cold
spins senses,
moon, street, and phone light
symbolize
alone,
awake,
afraid


Challenge 2: February - A Poem a Day #21

Upside down swing queen
Monkey bar child, I once was
The ground is dashing

Sugar sweet with cream
Banana split cherry top
My favorite shirt

Bang! Sky filled with zing
monotonous fireworks crash
Blue wave ocean screams

Tuesday, February 26, 2013

Challenge 2: February - A Poem a Day #19

I wake up at 2 am and my life is surreal,
like, "Hey Sir, is that real?"
A series of alarms and goals mark my day,
an hour of this, that,
and a night here or there
for free play

The clutter is calmer than lethargy,
though,
the structure
more stable than
free verse

Still,
it all feels off

Sunday, February 24, 2013

Challenge 2: February - A Poem a Day #18

Cake,
imploded upon itself
and
burning remnants,
remind me
I'm no Martha

Campy smells
and a snowy outdoors
coming in
to lessen the smoke
tell me
laugh,
don't cry,
sometimes smoke gets in
your eyes

And you forget,
it's a better memory

Thursday, February 21, 2013

Challenge 2: February - A Poem a Day #17

In this snowy silence,
A cat breathing and the heater clicking
The sound if the pages turning
And the occasional car rumble far
Out the door
The only noise is in these pages
Or in my own head
It is calm

Wind
White out
Glistening sun swirls
And a gap in the blinds
Created by an inquisitive kitten
revealing snow blowing and a stream of sun
Shadows of its movement
Dance on the other blinds
Ghostly almost

Then quiet
Peace

Wednesday, February 20, 2013

Challenge 2: February - A poem a Day #16

I have a note that reads,
yellow apron what!!
I don't know what it means
I assume it was Siri,
my phone's computer
interpreting something I said
into a language she understands
like when she says
Cheep-oat-lay instead of Chipotle
sometimes she says,
"I don't know what you mean by..."

Well, Siri
I don't know what you mean by
yellow apron what!!

That idea might be lost.