A Frog for Cheryl

(Note: This is a reprint of a poem I published years ago in Licking River Review. Not sure why, but I’ve been thinking about my long-gone friend Cheryl, who died when we were ten. The poem also appears on jamesrichardstewart.com.”)

When they took your leg I understood.
It was your hand I wanted to hold,
for no reason other than to quiet
the strange bird in my chest.
Your gray house was on the corner
where we’d catch both frogs and the bus to school.
After healing you came to our house to swim and
everyone looked away while you hopped in.
I put on my mask and went under the water
so I could stare at how your short leg
ended without anyone watching me.
You made sure I got a good look
from both sides as you sat on the steps
in the dancing turquoise shallows.
A ridge had formed where your skin
was gathered and folded.
Your bathing suit was blue.
When I heard later that they
hadn’t got it all I cursed god
and waited defiantly for lightning to strike.
You were gone before we turned eleven.
I saw you late in that tenth summer
being wheeled around
our loop road and even though
it was your mother at your back
it took me two short breaths to see you
in those wrapped bones hunched there with
abandoned hair staring at something I could not see.
I was on my way to that swampy little creek.
Our eyes met and you were embarrassed.
I became your mirror.
I wanted to tell you that I was after frogs,
but your mom gave just the slightest
shake of her head and sadly smiled for you.
The next time I get back East
I’ll drive to the cemetery and stand in
that arc of pine and oak and maple.
I know I can find you as soon as I
get used to how the trees have grown.
I will catch a frog and let her go
for you
and for me too.

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Surface Tension

“I don’t mind the snow, it’s the ice,
it has no surface tension.”
“What do you mean? Of course it has
surface tension, it’s ice. It’s hard. I’d
say that it’s very tense.”
“No. Surface tension is a property of liquids.
In regards to water,
it’s why there is life on this planet.”
“So, you’re saying that ice isn’t water?”
No, I’m saying that ice is not a liquid.”
“And you don’t like ice
because it has no surface tension?”
“Yes. Ice is for skating and chilling refreshments.”
“Speaking of refreshments, I see you have
an adult refreshment there by your elbow.”
“Yes. I’ve been tense lately,
but only on the surface.”
“You’re telling me you have surface tension?”
“Yes, but then, I’m mostly water.”

surface_tensionMelting-ice-polar-bear Title Goes HereIce_and_Water_by_Thelma1

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Double Haiku–Tracks and Ties

Wind chill howls the cut;
tracks and ties a frozen stretch;
hands hide in warm down.

Breathing plumes a fog
seen by the falcon flying
out of vapor’s reach.

railroad_tracksfalcon_logo

(tracks by Leora Wenger (leoraw.com); falcon from falconnippers.com)

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Elk on Holiday

Dear Hop-Two-Legs,

Did you see us downtown? That was a fun day. It was nerve-wracking for me, but the youngsters had a good time and the females kept them in line. The grass in the meadow by the Ridge Path was tender and sweet. Big Meadow was pretty good too. The grass by town’s sit-and-watch-the-ocean bench was the best. It was just salty enough.

I did not see you. If you had been there, you would probably have seen the coyotes in the woods and dunes watching us. The guys with those black boxes on their shoulders, talking into those black sticks, did not see the coyotes. If they had, they would have pointed the glass end of their black boxes at them, too. We certainly knew where they were every step of the way. You might have seen them if you had been there. You have a good way of looking and you can think ahead. That is hard for me, but I am learning.

When we were finished in town, we trotted up the beach, back to that meadow behind your house, and hunkered down in the bog. It was a good day. Sorry you missed it.

Your pal,
Buddy

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(town photos courtesy of KGW.com; coyote photo from digital-images.net)

Posted in Consciousness, Coyote, family, Wildlife | Tagged , , , , , , , | 7 Comments

Haiku–Naked Head, Silly Laugh

The wind bares my head;
silliness reigns when people
chase down a loose hat.

Blair And Ahern To Re-Establish Blair Power Sharing Executiveblow-off-hats2

(left photo from rapgenius.com; right from dailymail.co.uk)

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Haiku–Got Dreamed and Missed It

The dream was sexy.
Remembering why is vague.
Loveliness leads on.

angel2

Posted in Dream, Haiku, memory, Poem, Sex | Tagged , , | 4 Comments

Double Haiku–A Nail from the Heart

Swept away by brooms
intent on dusting heart beats;
memories let go.

Guitars are only
hammers on sublime old nails;
questions seeking light.

sunset moonrise

(from eorthe.tumblr.com by Vic de Vera)

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To Grow and Be Safe

Well.
You’re both down there now
with pieces of my heart,
shared like brie on a plate
for the enjoyment of this family
who loves unconditionally and
proffers a home to grow in and be safe.

We are emptier than we were yesterday,
but will fill up as time flies on.
It is our nature to share.
We can’t help it and
the helping helps us to a wide
helping of the best the world has to offer.
It is the nature of who we are.

Elk, foxes, coyotes, eagles, osprey, deer, and
all manner of domesticated creatures
populate our back yard with their blessings,
but for the first time in forty years
no quadrupeds live in our house.
So far, twenty-four hours into it,
it feels very strange, indeed.

Why do we give our hearts when
we know they will break like
dawn shatters the shimmering night?
The shadows loom above my eager heart.
I seek to give what will
always call me to grief,
for the rest of my life.

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(Scripps pier in La Jolla. Courtesy of johnhmoore.com. Life goes on.)

Posted in end-of-life, family, Morning, Oregon, Poem | Tagged , , , , , , , , , | 4 Comments

Silly Old Cat

Silly old cat.
You almost made it to twenty.
What is that in cat years?
You never gave in
to mere affection
and were loathe to suffer
a belly rub.
You drew blood
from the uninitiated.

Maine Coon and who knew what else.
Hair
everywhere,
more than you knew how to groom.
It fell to your bipeds
to help you with that
and we were no captains of diligence.
Your look was always disheveled
as your regarded the world with distrust.

You found a routine of love
because the rest of us would
have it no other way.
You were so tiny when you came
and so weightless when you left.
Rama taught you what he could and
preceded you to the treeline down in back.
He was the mother you lost too soon.
Silly old cat.

TOSHIBA Exif JPEG

Posted in Aging, end-of-life, parents, Poem, Slice of Death | Tagged , , , , , | 3 Comments

To That Which is Not I

You have to start somewhere.
Depending on what you’re doing,
it is best to start before the ending.
I must admit, though,
it is not mandatory.
Stories can begin with the ending
and end with the beginning.
However, life as we know it cannot,
at least, not until we learn how quantum aspects
govern the concepts of consciousness and perception.
Until we forget that we don’t know,
our window to the World will
maintain its tiny self and hold our
imaginations tight within the boundaries
to which we have become accustomed.
That longing we feel,
does it come from leaving our mothers?
We are momentary amphibians and then
our skin must learn to listen without
fluid connecting everything.
It falls to our brains to create a
way to connect where there is
no tide, no heartbeat, no motive wash of life.
We learn light.
We learn night.
We learn to ignore who we were.
Our little window grows ever so slowly.
We want to go home.
We concoct ways to reconnect to that which is not I,
to that which is Us.
We become our own myth.
We stop trusting our skin.
We misinterpret what it tells us.
We invent endless recipes,
trying to create a broth that will nourish
what we cannot see.

baby-massageMolecular Thoughtsuniverse, window, ladder 159155

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