
wake me home
some other time –
beyond this life remembered
fall to me the places
I have known –
save for me
a little house
with not much more
for leaving –
arms to fold
wake me now
to home
. . .
22 Monday Jan 2018
Posted in Poetry, Storytelling
19 Friday Jan 2018
Posted in Poetry, Storytelling

of strangers
I’ve forgotten –
breath against my skin
the velvet crush
of whiskey as my name
implied
the way
the path would give
and nights you’d call again
across the miles
a gentle
whispering –
offered one more
every time
gather me to home
where I began
to clear the slate
of those who loved
me long
voices without memory
of time
. . .
19 Friday Jan 2018
Posted in Poetry, Storytelling

what willing spring
shall flutter
as leaves into a stream
to take away
the chill that wears my bones
what blossom
yet imagined
is tempted from the seed
to right the window sill
inside my home
what memory
shall warm me –
as places I have known
a breath of everything I love
when all the rest are gone
. . .
02 Tuesday Jan 2018
Posted in Storytelling

Now and then, I’m reminded of the unique wonder that is inherent to our living, loving, and journey through the number that becomes our days.
And while most travels are the same, others can vary based on age, our place in the world, and even the area where we are born to.
Just yesterday, I made the trip to see my mother, some thirty minutes down the road. Along the way, I passed a place I have overlooked hundreds of times, but this time was different. I noticed a cluster of trees and just as I passed, I realized there was a worn down path – a road (less traveled) that navigated between them, through them.
And just like that, I was at another place of my life. I was 18.
While I don’t for one minute think that ‘parking’ is unique to the south, I think that every place we find love is unique in some way – even if only unique to us (every kiss, the first, the sweetest ÷ the only).
In the south (or at least in my part of the South), we would never spend a Saturday night in the backseat of a car when the option of a blanket of clover beneath and stars above is so readily available.
could I tell you
the truth of this –
of secrets writ to skin
of nights
not left to injury or scar
the memory returning us
not so weary
not so far
to fields where clover blooms
beyond the stars
. . .
27 Wednesday Dec 2017
Posted in Poetry, Storytelling
Tags
breath, choice, destinations, home, journey, life, love, memory, sometimes, soul, time, travel, truth

turn
as I the pages
of a story
last you wrote
of home
and winding roads
to bring you here
truth
as I remember
were days a chord replaced
snow –
along the fences
left to clear
light
retains a memory
of breath along the way
wonder sits
as empty –
shadows
fall
trust
was I a moment
or more
than words can find
of choices
I am whispered –
I am all
. . .
21 Thursday Dec 2017
Posted in a time for telling, Poetry, Storytelling
Tags
bliss, connection, faith, family, grace, gravel roads, knowledge, life, living, love, memory, old maps, postmark, reason, relationship, spirit, strength, truth, wealth, wonder
Just this week, a friend told me of the start of a new tradition within her family wherein each member shared their best Christmas memory. Even in recounting the experience, tears filled her eyes as she spoke of her own, and those shared by others. There were moments of sorrow and others
of pure joy, but eventually, they all became the best memory ever.
How is it that we’ve forgotten that? To know that every sorrow wears a coat of joy, and every bliss is but a warning of grief – a missing of the sweetest part? And yet, when measured into the same overflowing cup, they become the best – again and again.
She asked to my best memory ever and I think (partially) it was dislodged from my heart by her telling, but it is one of joy and family……….the best ever still.
Tho we didn’t know it at the time, we weren’t rich. My family of six lived in a two bedroom trailer until I was twelve. Then we moved into a castle of three bedrooms….. 🙂 The memory recalled is from the ‘castle’. Every Saturday was the same. One by one, my brother and sisters would wake for some reason and make our way to my parent’s room, my parent’s bed. Until we were all there, telling our dreams, torturing and tickling, and eventually deciding on breakfast.
But Christmas was another such time. My brother (who by virtue of the fact that he was the only son, had his own bedroom) would sleep in the girl’s room. We’d all pile into one big bed (or it seemed big at the time – tho I suspect it was no more than a full-size). I’m not sure we slept at all, but during the night, with every little squeak or bending of board, we’d speculate that Santa had come around. My brother was the designated outlook for us, and he would sneak down the hall to spy on the living room………and then run back to the safety of us to report. There was no understanding that it had to be five o’clock before we could get up. The only restriction was that we couldn’t get up before Santa had arrived.
Years later, I have heard stories of how long it took to get all the presents under the tree*. Between wrapping, assembling, and playing with all the toys – it was their joy we were most anticipating I think. Even now, at Christmas, I imagine the sound of little boy feet running down the hall…….. ‘he’s here, he’s here’………..
Let us keep Christmas forever in our tiny hearts, remembering things little as big. Let us keep love through the sharing of stories – creating anew every best memory.
* My Chatty Cathy doll was almost worn out before Christmas, and a promise to get a kitten for my sister resulted in an unexpected run to the country – and a cat that nearly brought my dad to stitches. In the telling, even more sweet beautiful tears. My dad comments, ‘we didn’t know just how good we had it’…. Then he winks, ‘yeah, we knew’……..
wake me home
some other year –
beyond this life surrendered
fall to me the places
I have known –
save for me
a little room
with not much more
for leaving –
arms to fill
wake me now
to home
. . .
Author’s Note: One of my favorite reposted as a reminder.
13 Wednesday Dec 2017
Posted in Poetry, Soapbox, Storytelling
Tags
family, immortality, life, love, reward, riches, soul, story, treasure, truth, what is left when there is nothing left

Maybe it’s the rush that is the season, but lately, I’m more and more reminded of the present that is the present.
A friend recently commented that her goal for 2018 was to be wherever her feet were – to be grounded in the now – looking nither forward or back but only to this ‘perfect’ moment – free from the boundaries and ultimate limitations inherent with the others.
As expected, it got me thinking about the present and how wisely (or not) we spend our moments. I’ll readily admit that I love talking about the past. Not in the sense that I speak of it with regret or sorrow, but as part of the larger story – perhaps the place we began, though it might not have appeared so at the time.
The stories are what define us, help us to grow, and in sharing those, we allow others a part of us that exists (like the present) beyond the grasp of past or future. In my humble opinion, there is no relationship nor circumstance that cannot be made better by four simple words – tell me a story. In the sharing, the present becomes greater than the depth of a moment, a season, a lifetime.
Of times I spent with my daddy, the gift of being present rewarded me with amazing treasures – parts of him. There were stories I had heard before, but others, I had not. The same is true of my visits with mama. From an ordinary conversation about fishing comes a story I didn’t know.
When she was pregnant with me, she couldn’t work in her daddy’s cafe. Yet, there were days when he needed fish for the restaurant and he took her with him. That part of the story is sweet enough, but there is another part. Because she was expecting, there were times when she grew nauseous or tired. He carried a blanket with him so that she could nap in the bottom of the boat while he fished.
I love that story……a piece of my grandfather who died a month before I was born. A piece of my mother, and a piece of me.
And now, in another way, perhaps a piece of you too.
I never tire the revelation, of the insight into all that matters. When faced with a grieving friend, the simple words, ‘tell me a story about her’ (or him) is enough to alter perspective, allowing us a shared place of memory, intimacy, solace and connection.
In our stories, we are at once a hero and immortal. Where the story remains, so our name, repeated long past the expanse of either past or future.
So, tell me………
when last I dreamed
I lay awake
and wandered unto home
the safe and sweet
embrace
once was you
tell me now
some other time
of who you are
and why
you knew my name
before I thought
to love
. . .
30 Thursday Nov 2017
Posted in Poetry, Storytelling, Uncategorized
Tags
a time for telling, abundance, ageless, allowance, choice, destiny, divine intuition, gravel roads, home, journey, love, story

today I found another
note –
a reminder tucked away
beneath the eaves
flat against the wall
amazing how
the weather turned
but not a line
was lost
to autumn’s beating branches
winter’s silent fall
I wonder
as the ancient west
spins to dark again
will there we meet anew
some other time
daring in our fearlessness
to write our names
as one –
easing as a season
into rhyme
. . .
30 Monday Oct 2017
Posted in Poetry, Storytelling
Tags
another me, beginning, birth, death, home, life, love, mystery, seasons, story, time, truth, unremembering

I was a story
born of will and ink
before I knew
to know you well
for all I was ~
another choice
with one more truth
to tell
another me
some other time
tho lifetimes lay between
the start
and this beginning
was nothing
as it seemed
of birth and breath
goodbye and then
to meet again somewhere
beyond the grace
of giving ~
another dream to share
where weaving
I have noticed
lines to write anew
seasons come from waiting
watching –
a moment
passing thru
. . .
18 Wednesday Oct 2017
Posted in Poetry, Rambling, Storytelling
Tags
another time, beginning, knowing, life, love, relationship, remembering, seasons, seeing in the dark, travel, truth, wandering

he spoke
of distant mornings
(a light she strained to see)
she wrote
of lowly purpose
filled with love
(and mystery)
he listened
as she listened
they talked
(and talked some more)
of the road
they passed together
another way
(sometime) before
he spoke
of ancient winters
(a field where brothers fell)
she spoke
in careful whispers
of a loss
she grieved (as well)
he cried
and she was tender
(in the catching of each tear)
she reached
to find him (waiting)
(with want
to have her) near
he stayed
(beyond the leaving)
lest she ever think
him gone
as she woke
beyond the darkness
a star
(for wishing on)
. . .
Starry-eyed Writer, Cautious Philosopher, Hopeful Romantic
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