July 20, 2023

Turning around

never felt exciting before,

in the many, many times I've changed direction.

Maybe when I was little, and

    spun, and

        spun, and

fell over giggling (one time I threw up!)

but this — is different, this is new,

and I am giggling.


I tried to do it right, and shook a little,

part from trepidation, and partly 

    like a speck of iron quivering in magnetic flux.

This way, this way, this way. So many lines of force,

gentle, continuous over vast distance, converging: there, here.


I shook, I was giddy, I was afraid, I was awash

in the strange sense of being headed

in the right direction.

    Nothing could be simpler.


There was an old green trampled mat,

draped over the porch steps getting sun-beaten dry after rain.

    I'd taken it. It would do.

And when I opened my eyes

facing it and my splayed hands, everything looked just

    like new.



July 18, 2023

It's not so much that it is hard

as easier to seal into,

in secret dark, a cellar barred

away, the wants I knew I knew


would always be, and tell myself

the better thing would be to will

them gone. But bowed, a burdened shelf

within me creaks beneath them still.


And days are long when measured 

in regrets replete with years

of gifts I should have treasured,

turned to moldered souvenirs.


I know this lesson now, I say, 

but still I take my time,

and lose in a despondent way

what left of it is mine.


My body says "I'm tired,"

"You tire me," retorts my spirit,

and hisses, "Damn you, cut me free."

I struggle not to hear it.


And maybe it's the weight of what

I shouldn't say that bids me seek

a rock to whisper to the things that

I had lacked the grace to speak


when there was time — I know there never 

was a possibility 

but also know that it were better

had I mourned, then, and honestly.



July 16, 2023

At night when I am smallest

and the crater walls are high

the stones run fingers down my back

and press me up against the black

and I could swear I hear them cry

at night when I am smallest


I've begged you then to let me die 

and sometimes feigned a sudden slack

as if this grief were just a bear.

I'd never thought of it as prayer

when being shaken limp with lack

I begged you'd let me die


I've not consulted zodiac

or wailed at empty air

but, bent beneath remorse, confessed

as though a judge were standing there

who doesn't speak but echoes back


and in the silence after, I

can see the crater filled with sky


at night when I am smallest



July 15, 2023

Could we be sisters? asked the tree

her scraggly crown abuzz in thought,

If spinning on my seedwings, I'd

not landed in this little pot,


but grown amidst your tangled roots

and known what things they say

and learnt the lilts of choral chems

and shared the songs, the dance, the day.


Would now it be presumptuous

(if only I could stand)

to pull myself from this thin mulch

and try to root in righter land?


"She does not know our languages,

what could she take, what could she give?

Her cankered boughs won't bear the sun.

We do not think that she will live."


They're right, I think, to rule it out,

abide what cannot be unmade.

But I would wane the sweetest season

nodding in your shade.



July 14, 2023

for an Old Woman


The first meagre minutes of the day

can’t tempt me from bed, but something from my fever years drives me

out and I am 


in a low, peculiar vantage point,

the screen window above me

catches nettling light I squint through, looking


for the sick heat of other days

for a way out not through this gouged place

for roots not split shells, old names


or chastisement for a fool returning —

my gaze has drifted.

again I look slantwise up. from nowhere


an impossibly opal sunrise

circles the world in pearl ember,

look! I close my eyes and miss you


I haven’t written from this place for years, barely read.

that part of me doesn’t want to eat,

knows like old cats and toothless elephants


know, that sustenance is not the answer,

know to look

elsewhere, but not anywhere I can find


the wind

ruffles the sky,

            listen


are you listening with me?


as water runs softly over my face, falls in tiny thuds

to the wind

tousling


the shifting sides and secret nooks

of that bright unlikely expanse…

a white tarp, of course, stretched over the neighbours’ roof


eyes pushing forty have grown no wiser

and lead me no better than before,

but what did they see for that moment?


somewhere beyond a membranous surface

I took for the sky