Ready or Not, Here I Come

I’m dreaming of a place I knew
with red arbutus bark cracked and peeling
writing ancient messages with modern pens
imagining the pens were feathers
dipped in ink

I’m remembering a forest I loved
filled with faeries and elves
English-speaking animals who were my friends
trees that spoke softly in my head
in perfect sync

I loved those days
Playing in the waves for hours
Dancing round the living room to the Nutcracker
Dreaming up games with magical powers
I loved those days

I’m thinking of a time I knew
when fear had a shape I could name
the sound of the waves so loud on the beach
it must be dinosaurs on their way
so run and hide

I’m reflecting on a song I loved
that could vanquish almost any fright
warm hands that tucked me safely out of reach
of all glowing eyed monsters and the tricks
they always tried

I loved those days
Imagination gave vivid life to fears
Sometimes they ran wild but they could be healed
With touch and a sweet wash of tears
I loved those days

I’m longing for a time I knew
when life was more simple and free
the days smiled easily both wild and kind
no need to rush off, time was
gentle and slow

I’m wishing for a time I loved
awakening untamed each morning
with no unnamed beast inside my mind
spurring me onward, though where
I never quite know

I loved those days
Joy bloomed unchoked by invasive species
It blossomed at everything and nothing
My self felt whole and not in pieces
I loved those days

Yes I loved those days
when no formless shadows
at the edge of my thoughts
gathered like rainclouds

Better do something

Yes I loved those days
when no tugboat engine
whirring loud and hot
filled me with pressure

Better do something

Do something
get something done
but nothing is ever enough

Be someone
a race to be run
but time is never enough

I’m dreaming of a place I knew
where climbing a tree cracked and peeling
was a matter of deep satisfaction
the thrill of climbing higher over bark
so smooth and rough

I’m remembering a forest I knew
where I danced like the sun through the leaves
to love life was a natural reaction
alone with the beautiful earth, just being me
was enough

I loved those days
The limitlessness of the mind
The heart and body’s love of play
We are earthlings free and wild
We knew this magic as a child
And I will search until I find
The heart-deep urge to say
I love these days
I love these days

A Storm Blew in to a Hot Dry City

A storm blew in to a hot dry city
A storm flew in with thunderous wings
A storm blue cloud so heavy and pretty
With a rumbly voice the thunderclaps sing

With a searing might the lightning strikes
With a click to their heals the people scurry
With a wild daylight that looks like night
A storm blew in with a crackling fury

The clouds split their seams
The drops fall big and fat
The thunder still screams
At each human, dog, and cat

At each corner they all huddle
At each flash they all shudder
At each doorstep shines a puddle
The boats let down their rudders

Soon the city is filled with canoes
Soon the city streets are like rivers
Soon the city flotsam accrues
And the city’s a-shake with the shivers

And the thunder’s so loud it will crack the sky
And the water’s so high that whirlpools spin
And the babies and children will cry and cry
A storm blew in, a storm blew in!

A storm blew in to shake the town
A storm blew in and flooded the streets
A storm blew in and they thought they would drown
But their boats formed yet a sturdy fleet

But their spirits held despite the storm
But the dogs paddled bravely on
But the cats hid under blankets warm
And through the clouds a sun-ray shone!

And the thunder faded to a whisper
And the flood drained quickly out to sea
And the cats and dogs dried their whiskers
People wrung their hats with glee

People looked round at the mess left then
People formed clean-up crews and committees
People, though, would always remember when
A storm blew in to a hot dry city!

Image from: http://www.weatherclipart.net/free_weather_clipart/clip_art_image_of_a_flooding_city_0515-1005-1317-1820.html

Cricket Lore

Insects know their purpose
So much so it can boggle the mind
How can you be so sure
Crickets
Their perfect summer song
waivers only in self-protection
Ants, spiders, yellow jackets
They act with a certainty
backed by eons of interacting
with the earth as one
Dragonfly, praying mantis
They do not try
To tame this green planet
Ladybugs.
Beetles.
What strange and beautiful names we give to insects.
June bug, silverfish, cockroach
Wasp     butterfly     no-see-um.
Poetry in motion.
Words as intricate as spiders’ webs,
sitting
on the page
like dew drops      suspended      in spider homes.
or
Those strings of silk that hang from the trees
in spring
With little caterpillars dangling at their ends,
ready to drop onto your clothes
unnoticed.
Three out of every four creatures on this earth are insects.
We spend much time
stamping on them
sweeping them out of corners
spraying ourselves with poisons
to keep them away
But they have the true reign over this planet.
Cicada
Grasshopper
Bumblebee.
Nature’s raw beauty and brutality.
Damsel flies, wood bugs
and
demodicids          those tiny bugs
that live in the roots of our eyelashes
so small
we could never notice them if we tried.

The muse may very well be a spider
Weaving words like
Threads
Sometimes close together
or     spread
far     apart
Sometimes exquisite
Magical as the dew that
Reflects the sun’s first light
Sometimes
A sticky mass of confusion
Ready to break apart
at the gentlest affront
Better luck next time

As summer marches proudly
Over the mountains
Into our gardens
The talk of the town
Mosquitoes birth themselves
In still water and hum towards
Campsites and family of deer.
Termite, tick, moth.
Grasshopper, lacewing, horse fly.
The warmth sends us
hurrying from our homes
like bees from smoke
moths toward the flame
Our pale winter hides
may be burned by hot May sun
but at last
with the summer breeze on our skin
the smell of salt and warm earth
cottonwood and blueberry
at last we begin to remember
who we are
and where we came from
listening to the crickets
singing their stories of creation
into the night

Written May 2014

Photo by Steven Bethune
Photo by Steven Bethune

Baby Loves Surprises

I have neglected my blog lately, so let me start with apologies to my few but faithful followers! I will do my best to cover the highlights of the last couple weeks with a little rhyme…

First stop, Munich, to visit a friend;
She’s called the place home for six years.
Now she’s putting that to an end,
A new adventure, changing gears.

So we flew to München to see her first,
And explore the city out and in;
Ate a few pretzels, drank litres of beer,
Then we caught a bus up to Berlin.

Berlin is a fascinating place,
With a famous history to be sure,
But also the home to a new face
Of music, nightlife and counterculture.

Next stop: Danmark!
Just a short flight,
But we could not tell my family
Until the time was right.

We told white lies
About our holiday plans,
Said we were visiting
More southerly lands.

Why all this sneaking, you ask?
Well, it was a worthy task,
For Anna, my dear sister
(Oh how I have missed her),
The day after us was due to arrive;
Our presence was to be a surprise!

Rob and I hid when we heard Anna knock,
My excitement was barely contained,
When she saw me she stepped back in shock,
Her mouth opened and she exclaimed.

Then we hugged like a pair
Of magnets so strong,
We cried into our hair
And laughed warm and long.

Then up behind her Rob sneaked
For the second surprise,
Well, Anna happily freaked:
more hugs and joyous cries.

Since then we have had such a hyggelig time
(Which means cosy and nice in Danish rhyme):
Cycling, feasting, exploring the sights,
Then sleeping so quiet and peaceful each night,
Out in Mormor and John’s garden house,
Tucked up like a snug little treasure mouse.

We have been busy as scuttling grouse
With a painting project as well
(The newly red and white garden house
Is indeed looking rather swell).

A few more days in this northerly land,
Before Rob and I return to hot Spain,
Soaking up Denmark´s beauty so grand
And seeing beloved Anna again!

photo 2 photo 1

Dreamsongs

Six silver coins flash in my pocket
Seven smiling cats flash their claws
A suspension bridge wobbles and sways
Above rocky and treacherous jaws

A night a day
A place inbetween
Awake asleep
Not what it seems

A house on fire that hangs in midair
A forest I know
But I don’t
I must get to the bottom of this
I must run but
My legs won’t

Skies at the edge of the world are churning
Creatures who burst from the seas
Larger than tsunami waves looming
Blacker than hearts of ebony trees

Dressed in moonlight I fly through the night
Higher and higher over mountains below
I land on the peak to ski down the slope
Gliding like lightning on sparkling snow

A garden like the Queen of Hearts’
Beside a friend I long ago knew
Chatting as if no time had passed
Since the dense wood split our paths in two

A blurry hand
Before my face
Am I dreaming?
What is this place

A sheet a pillow
My forearm is numb
The light from the day
Already begun

Waking up with a song in my head
I can’t run but
I can walk much faster than this
Lyrics coiling round the bed
Oo-wee    oo-wee
Sleep and waking blur and twist

The day turns solid and the
Dreamlands float away
But otherworldly whispers linger
And the song still plays

DSCN1032

Moving Through

This blog post—if it ever gets written—has been one of the tougher pieces I have come up with for this website. To be honest, it often feels tough to put something together that I feel comfortable allowing eyes other than mine to see, but these sentences mark my fourth attempt at this writing this post. Having discarded the first three, once again the glaring question raises its head as I stare at a mostly blank Word document: what now?

I do not know where I am going with this. I know, however, that I missed putting anything up last week because everything I wrote just didn’t work. Something was missing.

I have read in several books on writing that if a piece lacks heart it shows immediately. There needs to be some real human emotion behind the words to give it a pulse. Even in fiction, something has to be at stake for the author, that allows him or her to breathe life into the characters, that drives events into being in just the right moment, and makes the story that which it is. In other words, if the writer is avoiding something it will show, even in pieces that do not resemble his or her life whatsoever. Furthermore, you must have genuine interest. You cannot expect readers to be interested in what you have written if you are not.

I do not claim to always interest my readers or to consistently infuse what I write with pulse and passion, but I do aim to write authentically. Sometimes that is more challenging than others. The closer we get to deep fears, the more resistance builds. The closer I get to revealing dark and tender places inside me that still wince when touched, the more I suddenly find I don’t know what to write about. Writer’s block: an infuriating hurdle but also a very effective protection mechanism. There is no risk of revealing myself—and facing the fear of disapproval, rejection or indifference—if I don’t know what to write about.

But the truth is, this week I do know what I want to write about; I just don’t know how.

I don’t know how to write about death. Some of my earliest memories include death, although one may be an image I created upon hearing the story so many times, that has come to represent something that I feel more than remember. The effect of those early losses—of my great grandmother, from a stroke while she was dancing with me, and then my Gram, from cancer, a few months later—must lie at the root of my at-times frantic fear of losing loved ones. I remember times as a child running to my room to sob my heart out when either of my parents was late coming home, imagining all sorts of terrible accidents that could have taken them away from me. It has required patience, trust, conversation, therapy, awareness and simply time to come to the point where I can speak about this fear of loss calmly, without going to pieces.

When I was in grade 11, a wonderful teacher of mine died suddenly and unexpectedly. He was an excellent and creative educator, and a seemingly healthy and active father, husband and musician. He collapsed one day while going for a run and never woke up again. It was a sad shock, and I remember writing messages along with hundreds of other students in memorial of him, on a huge piece of paper that was taped along the hallway. Then a few days later we had an assembly to honour him, which finished off with photographs and some of his favourite music. This last part struck some deep chord in me and I lost it. I cried and cried, and could not stop. His wife was there and came over to comfort me. I remember thinking, it should be the other way around! Get it together! But I couldn’t. I missed my bus home and one dear friend stayed with me the whole time, as other teachers came up to me, compassionate but somewhat perplexed. They didn’t know we were so close, some said. We weren’t. I admired him and loved his classes, but I didn’t know him much better than most other students. It’s just there is this river of grief inside me, and when it is tapped, it surges up and overwhelms me. I must simply wait as it runs its course, until it recedes at last and calm returns. But even then I sense that somewhere inside it continues flowing, ready to surge up from the depths in response to this world’s sadness.

Just last week I discovered that a young man from my hometown took his life. We went to school together, for a few years in elementary and then in high school. He was very close with some of my best friends, and known by nearly everyone in the community thanks to his talent as a musician and environmental activist. I never knew him near as well as I would have liked, and in hindsight I wish I had said hi more often. Death makes everything look different in hindsight. If only this, if only that. And the shock and sadness of losing someone to depression adds a whole other layer, a deeper shade to the regret that death often initially gives rise to. Imagining the suffering that leads a person to end it all is awful.

He was not the first person I have known to commit suicide; sadly both one of my Dad’s best friends and his close cousin had their lives claimed by depression in late middle-age. Though there is no comparison in loss, there does seem to be another layer of remorse when hearing of the death of someone very young. In this mysterious world, every minute of every moment new life surges into being, and every minute life leaves. But every life is so precious, and one of the most basic human reactions to death is a shocked and surreal disbelief. We cannot contemplate the end of consciousness. It just doesn’t make sense. Maybe that’s because death is not the end, at least not for our essence. I hope not.

Whatever the case may be, I send my love and compassion for the families and friends grieving the loss of a loved-one, and do my best to honour the river that swells up inside my chest upon hearing such news. I hope too, with all my heart, that whatever happens to us after our lives end, it is filled with love, peace and belonging.

Everyday new life
Everyday new death
but every life is precious
as is every breath
Every loss is gaping
a chasm we must cross
Salty river of sorrow
among the stones and moss

The grief for the old
Flows deep and strong
but there is peace in deep water
and in having lived long
The water runs wild
when someone dies young
We cannot accept that
their song has been sung

Perhaps inside all of us
the sea of every loss
is kept
Entrusted by the universe
to guard each tear
ever wept

Could it also be that in each heart
the joy of every being lives?
The universe’s roots of love
The endless love that always gives

My heart opens to yours
And your heart
to mine too
We are made of the same
Ancient stardust
it’s true.

SONY DSC

Caleta de Cádiz

Sea crash
Spray of salt
Rock tunnels and passageways
Carved by eons of eternity

Wave splash
Stony fault
Water widens pushes splays
Walls wrought in fraternity

Human hand against the sea
Untamable and free
Living  heaving  dancing wildly

Timeless power
Renders stone
Tumbles tower
Dissolves bone

Yet walls remain
Half-eaten and holed
Patterns revealed
Like corals below

Three thousand years
Against this pier
Ancient city standing strong
History shining beneath the waves
Amid the ocean’s ever song
Human order misbehaves
Answering the wild watery call
The eternal origin of all

A cove exposed by long low tide
Footprints laughter photographs
A fortress on the southern side
Ice-cream cones and concrete paths

Civilizations rise and fall
Ocean waves are evergreen
Olden days and modern sprawl
The cove lies sleeping in-between

DSCF3479DSCF3463