
for every rise
another shore
is left beyond the tide
another heart
where once I broke the same
along these lines
a scar or two –
faded
almost gone
but still the heart
remembers love
by name
. . .
26 Wednesday Jul 2017
Posted in Poetry
26 Friday May 2017
Posted in Poetry, Uncategorized
there are pages
yet unpublished
inkstain of a kiss
times and days
remembered
unto this
breath where i
another taste
a night
not long ago
words became a whisper
i love so
poems writ to places
shadows sworn to fall
binding us to something
more
than e’er we may recall
fingers bent
to fingers
silence bears us still
beyond the reach of leaving –
the memory of will
. . .
08 Monday Aug 2016
Posted in a time for telling, home, Poetry, Storytelling

Earlier today, I was thinking about my sister, of a chapter just beginning new for her as her youngest son heads off to college. She’ll be fine because he will be. She’s given him all he needs to be successful, even if it means pushing him from the nest.
But then I arrived at work, and in a little bit, I heard the tragic news that a co-worker’s husband had been killed over the weekend when he lost control of his bicycle on a downhill curve. He was 56.
Yesterday, my nephew spoke of a lesson he shared with his Sunday school class – of the fleeting nature of life – a vapor.
And I am reminded (more often as I get older) of the truth in that analogy, but also another. That the vapor, while momentary, lingers far beyond the length of a day, a lifetime, a season. It can return at the first hint of blossoms in the spring, a cedar chest opened years later, a stutter of memory, as brief the scent of perfume pressed into pages nearly dried.
To be honest, the combined scent of lemon and moth balls can bring me near to tears.
We are never far from the things we love, regardless of what we might tell ourselves. The things that matter become a part of us. A song replayed can break my heart new, and yet, I find myself drawn to the melody sometimes.
Knowing full well what will happen, it is a welcome break for it is a reminder of a truth I dare not deny, as permanent as the scar that lines my thumb, a name forever on my lips.
softly now
as breezes blow
to heal the ancient pines
names as dust repeated
soothe again
rhythm born of rocking
once beneath the stars
a hand to hold
when all the lights
go dim
. . .
09 Monday May 2016
Posted in Poetry
Tags
allowance, comfort, death, grace, gratitude, home, joy, life, love, rain, solace, time, treasure, wholeness, willing, worth

how softly sings
the morning rain –
a pit of willing patter
as tears along
a length of tin –
buckets from a ladder
rain me down
drown me here
lest I the same become
a threat of storms
beyond the creek –
as rivers from the sea
sorrows
I have given claim
as paid with joys for me –
let it rain
tell I am clear
then let it rain
again
. . .
11 Monday Apr 2016
Posted in home, Storytelling
More than one florist tried selling us on roses, on carnations, lilies or gladiolas.
Somehow none of those seemed worthy of the man
who found beauty
in the wildflowers and weeds….

where
and I am with you now
no different
than before –
when winds are blown
and waves –
the sea concedes
faultless as a message
left behind
to soothe the shore
know that I am waiting –
a breath
you’ve yet to breathe
. . .
30 Wednesday Mar 2016

As of late, I’ve felt the gentle pull of time, tender reminders that the road before isn’t quite as long as the one behind.
Twilight cools on an old porch, as the sun fades. Violets soften in the shadows, lavender etched by lace.
Breath is stilled by the assurance of the stars, a look back to where they shine, unaccustomed to the wish not yet made.
gather me sweetly
as a name first rehearsed
a line
unwritten to rhyme
verse and there
to places
where grace
is held apart –
words
beneath my pillow
o the night
. . .
26 Tuesday Jan 2016
Tags
forgiveness, home, life, love, nature, passage, renewal, seasons, time, treasure, truth, what we keep

were seasons
undecided
by a measure made
of days
tis loss we bear –
a lifetime
shorter still
time has melted
here
and I don’t feel
the same as then
no matter
what I should
or what I will
petals lie awake
beside promise
sworn to keep –
an early spring
and one more
letting go
green betrays
the last goodbye
November
spoke about –
pastures buried deep
beneath the
snow
. . .
29 Tuesday Apr 2014
Posted in Poetry, Storytelling
Tags
becoming, breath, cherokee, conscious consciousness, destiny, faith, fearless, for only this, grace, knowledge, life, love, memory, old maps, passion, reason, spirit, star crossed, strength, timeless, treasure, truth, understanding, wandering, wonder
how sparse
these fleeting seasons
wherein our silence lies
as dungeons black
was there the martyr fell
confessing
to the almost
every time before
when dreams awoke
with stories of the veil
between the will
for one more day –
the rhythm of our years
is weighted by another
passed in vain
sins denied their pardon
keep me up at night
reason raps
the rusted window pane
wishes
I’ve decided
are rarely worth the risk
cast upon a starless
consequence
a boy I knew
I said I loved –
love him still sometimes
for moments of forever
nothing else makes sense
. . .
07 Friday Mar 2014
Posted in a time for telling, Poetry, Storytelling
Tags
becoming, blessings, breath, cherokee, connection, death, destiny, faith, family, forgiveness, grace, gravel roads, knowledge, life, love, memories, momentos, old maps, passion, reason, relationship, self, soul signature, spirit, spirituality, story, treasure, truth, understanding, value, wisdom
I realize it’s been a few days since I posted. I recognize the cycle even in myself. Periodically, I feel a need to break free. Periodically, I become convinced that everything I write sounds the same.
Maybe all writers do that. Anyway, a dear friend suggested a story.
Earlier today, I posted a note to a friend. She spoke of taking a day to drive along the coast, stopping at every little antique store along the way. There was a promise of a future time when we could share that love, and some discussion of pieces she had purchased because they reminded her of another time, and other places since gone. My note to her included this story, and so I include it here, with hopes it fills the void where poetry waits.
‘O, I must tell you about my aunt – the wife of my dad’s oldest brother.
My uncle passed about 10 years ago, and my aunt lived in the same little house they had near a lake in the town where my parents live (once retired, they relocated from Georgia). Anyway, since my uncle passed away, my aunt had lived pretty much alone. She has a sister that lives nearby but the two could never get along well enough to live together. Anyway, my cousin (my aunt Lillian’s daughter) was an only child. Years ago, she and her husband lived in Chicago but then they divorced. He remarried and moved to Salt Lake City, and it wasn’t long before my cousin moved (with her two children) to SLC. Rarely do I recall a time ever when the daughter came to see my aunt, or to see her father’s family. She has always been distant, but my aunt was fine (and loved) near her husband’s family.
Well, last May, the daughter flew in from SLC with demand that her mother could no longer live by herself. I hear they looked at a couple of assisted living places, but my aunt didn’t want to leave her house. Ultimately, the daughter packed Aunt Lil up and allowed her one little U-haul trailer of personal items to take with her. Then she called Salvation Army and had them come and pick up everything else. Mind you, this was without even letting my parents or any of her family know. She had a lifetime of things (memories) she had accumulated, left behind for strangers to fight over.
See why I have to have time to start stories? More detail than most people want.
Anyway, at Christmas, I received a little note from my aunt wherein she talked about how much she loved me and how much it meant to her that I was so good to Eucle (my uncle). She mentioned blankets I had brought him when he was ill and how they were now keeping her warm. There was no return address, but I got to work and found both the address and the phone number. Through word-of-mouth, my mother had heard she was living in the basement of her daughter (June’s) house. Not as bad as it sounds – it’s a basement apartment, and I can imagine it does give my aunt some privacy and independence. Although, if I calculate right, she’s 89.
I wrote her back, and because I feared for the part of her left behind, I decided to insert pictures that I pulled off all the facebook pages for my cousins, nieces, nephews, etc. It ended up being two pages of letter and 30 pages of pictures. I mailed it the middle of January.
Last week, I came home to find a large envelope with a SLC return address on it. My first thought was that June had intercepted the package and sent it back to me. But she hadn’t. It was from my Aunt Lil. There was a sweet letter telling me that she had the flu and that her hearing was getting worse, but that she hoped to write me a decent letter soon. I had offered to send her some books, and she said she would like that because she knew that anything I thought was good, would be really good. Then she said, “I’m still unpacking a couple of boxes. When I find more pictures, I’ll send them.”
There must have been 100 pictures in the envelope (some still in photo album pages). There was even a picture of my great great grandmother. Most were from my grandma and grampa’s childhood, but others were of my dad, his brothers and sisters. Of course, there were lots of pictures with people that I don’t know. I have no idea who they are. But I’ve already told my dad and promised that I would bring them so he could tell me who everyone is. He can hardly wait since we had such a great time on my last visit when I had him tell me stories. Now we have pictures to jumpstart the stories. 🙂
My plan was to take all the pictures to Walgreens and have them scanned to disk so that I could print them off, but also give copies to my brother and sisters (some of my cousins would love them too) before I mailed them back to my aunt.
I made the comment to my sister that Aunt Lil must have misunderstood me when I sent her the pictures. She must have thought I wanted her to send me her pictures. But my sister thinks different. “I don’t think she was confused at all. She’s getting older, and she’s probably worried about what would happen to those pictures when she dies. June would probably throw them out (she might have already said she didn’t want them). She wanted someone to have them – someone that would treasure them as she has.”
I don’t know if that’s the case, and it breaks me to think that’s true, or that my cousin wouldn’t want some piece of her parent’s story (because it’s part of her story, even if she doesn’t think so). In fact, it tears my soul in two thinking my aunt is seen as a responsibility, or anything other than the lovely woman she is.
I will send her some books and ask (gently) about the photos and whether she wants them returned to her. I will cry and I will worry. I will share in stories I don’t yet know, and I will thank God for the blessing that is my family.
Of course, I also realize that a part of me is always wrapped in the story, for surely it is another means by which we attain immortality.’
See why I am a storyteller……….
when the longest night
is fallen
from clouds above my bed
when trees are bent
the meadow wears a chill
reminders sit in cardboard
cedar trunks
and lace –
names are written down
where none can see
ne’er a darkness passes
as shadows
o’er my dream
the wind shall take
and leave the best
of me
. . .
28 Monday Oct 2013
Tags
becoming, choice, connection, defining, faith, fearless, forgiveness, grace, knowledge, life, love, old maps, passion, postmark, reason, soul, spirit, treasure, truth, understanding, wandering, worth
dreams melt easy
into places of home
a box in the attic
of truths
holding still
as little green stamps
held to a page
would buy us the heavens
– a treasure of will
feathering
shadows to dance
up above
the ceiling takes life
of her own
ushering thought
into meaning returned
wrapped in a blanket
of old
strange
our repentance
our surrender to more
than a dollar made do
with the coming
to whole
to see without seeing
to know
all we keep
where value is kept
in the attic
of soul
. . .
Starry-eyed Writer, Cautious Philosopher, Hopeful Romantic
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