Friday, April 30, 2010
Last day of April poems and thank you!
Thursday, April 29, 2010
And Suddenly We Grew Brave
Day 29: Today's RWP prompt was to choose news headlines and work elements of them into a poem. I chose headlines from the science section (online) of The New York Times. They were:
Like Origami, Pollen Grains Fold Just So
The Search for Genes Leads to Unexpected Places
Found Alive: The Loch Ness Monster of the Northwest Prairie. Alas, it Disappoints.
I also used the Poetic Asides prompt, which was to begin the title of a poem with, "And Suddenly."
And Suddenly We Grew Brave
For many moons, we cowered in the tall grasses
Of our hearts, afraid.
Our truth was as elusive as the Loch Ness Monster,
So somewhere along the way we stopped looking.
We mastered the art of folding ourselves up
Into pleasing forms, like origami
And only unraveling on sleepless nights
Or in quiet rooms with the blinds drawn.
We were purposeless
as pollen grains carried by the wind.
And then one day the wind whispered words,
The echoes of our genes, stories from our ancestors
Long forgotten. We dug our hands into the earth
And drank falling rain. We doubted everything we
Wednesday, April 28, 2010
Road Trip
Road Trip
Somewhere in Nevada,
Tumbleweeds racing along
Either side of us,
The desert wind robbing our breath,
No one ahead or behind for miles,
I turn to you with your sunscorched hair,
Sunglasses grazing your late afternoon stubble,
And say, “Let’s never stop.”
And you laugh and say,
“Ok.”
In Amish country, we counted carriages,
In Cincinnati, we sang our way
Up and down the dial.
In Kansas, we got homesick
For the jaggedness of NYC.
In New Mexico, we watched for UFOs.
And all along I enjoyed the ride.
But it is here in these great open spaces,
Sun set to broil,
Cacti reaching their prickly mitts
Toward each other,
Rushing toward the coast
Where you will leave and I will stay,
When I realize I don't want this trip to end.
One day many years from now,
I will be in a quiet room,
That you and I may or may not share,
And I will think of this moment.
I will not remember the nettles still stuck
In my shoe from our morning hike
Or the patch of sunburn on my right shoulder
Or even the Eagles song playing on the radio.
I will only remember
How I wished I could drive forever
On this road with you.
Tuesday, April 27, 2010
9/11/01
Monday, April 26, 2010
Playing with Fibs
Sunday, April 25, 2010
Muse
Saturday, April 24, 2010
Misunderstood
We are not amused
By the way you refuse
To laugh more quietly,
Stop talking back,
Accept our labels
For what you lack.
We will have no more
Idolizing ambitious bovines
Who insist on leaping
Over celestial signs.
Nor can we accept
the way you arrive
Signaling merrily
With lighthearted chimes.
Too often your p’s and q’s
Don’t pass the test
And your consumption
Of salt is alarming at best.
What’s more, you never keep
the black bird in sight,
when you finally show up you sing
of far green slopes and crimson night.
There’s nothing about you
That we can understand
So you’re on your own now.
Good luck in never-never land.
Friday, April 23, 2010
Napowrimo
Feeling dull around the edges, listless, uninspired? Have you run out of ways to describe your lover’s eyes? Do the stars just look like white dots in the sky? Do you see a hummingbird without even thinking about starting a haiku? As we get older, the stresses of too many Powerpoint presentations, e-mails, bills, minutes on hold, and unspoken words can radically reduce our levels of childlike wonder and imagination, increasing our risk for excessive literalness, old fogie-ness, fakeness, and even soullessness.
Now there’s Napowrimo, which has been proven in clinical trials to provide a sense of purpose, stimulate creativity glands, and dramatically increase levels of accomplishment. Napowrimo works by sending concentrated doses of alliteration, rhyme, and rhythm to the metaphorbellum, the part of our brains that makes things interesting. Just one dose a day for one month a year is all you need for tigers to Twitter and dragons to exhale clouds.
Check with your doctor before trying Napowrimo if your willpower is weak, you have poor internet access, are on vacation or are planning to go on vacation. Napowrimo is not for everyone. Do not use Napowrimo if you have never come to two roads diverging in a wood or are unmoved by the thought of ragged claws scuttling across the floors of silent seas.
In rare cases, serious allergic reactions have occurred. If you break out in hives or have trouble breathing while on Napowrimo, immediately step away from the keyboard and divert your mind by channel-surfing, working on a sudoku, or updating your status on Facebook.
Side effects include unwashed dishes, missing morning staff meetings, forgetting to eat lunch, listening to more rap music, unwatched YouTube videos, drowsiness, smiling for no apparent reason, and extended periods of self-indulgence. Alcohol may increase the potency of Napowrimo. If you experience a poetry-writing session lasting four hours or longer, seek medical assistance immediately or risk permanent damage to your ability to return to the ordinary.
Even if your outlook has improved, do not stop using Napowrimo until you’ve completed the entire course.
Remember it’s not too late to seek a newer world. Ask your doctor about Napowrimo today and see the world through saffron-scented, reverberating tendrils of unflinching fierceness.
Caution: Napowrimo can be habit-forming.
Thursday, April 22, 2010
New York
Wednesday, April 21, 2010
According to Their Years
According to Their Years
She is old. So is he.
They walk,
Brown spotted hand in
Varicose-veined one,
Crackling leaves
Under sensible shoes.
Her blue eyes are milky now,
The skin between her fingers rough.
He cannot wrap his hands completely
Round her waist like when they met.
There is a limp in his gait,
More hair in his beard than on his head.
He can’t hear her
Tuesday, April 20, 2010
343
Monday, April 19, 2010
Delicious
Sunday, April 18, 2010
Love is a Tiger
Love is a tiger,
fierce, going for the kill
the bite on the neck is brutally
passionate attacking the jugular
with no thought no hesitation
just the desire for a moment
Saturday, April 17, 2010
On the Pier
Friday, April 16, 2010
Rose and Saffron
Saffron
Pujaris marking
idols in yellow powder
Gentle scent of prayer
Thursday, April 15, 2010
The Lighthouse Keeper
Write a poem!
Winter is the hardest,
The long, cold climb with the torch.
It is not just the limp now
But age too that slows him down.
The ocean beckons him like a woman dancing,
All undulating curves.
His beam runs slowly back and forth like a caress.
Once before the war,
Still too young for anything but mischief,
he stowed away on a luxury boat.
Sneaking up to deck one night,
He saw a beautiful girl throw a bottle to the waves.
He dreams of that bottle washing up on his shore now.
A flap of wings startles him.
His arm smacks into a wall
Hard enough to leave a bruise.
A pair of puffins circle over his head,
He opens a glass panel and sets them free.
In one of the mirrors, he sees
his chew-stained beard,
gnarled as an old rug,
He massages the wattle underneath
with hands as rough as pumice.
“Where’d you go?” he asks out loud,
hearing only the rapturous sighs of the sea.
On the waves, the light keeps
searching
for someone to save.
And far below,
an octopus wraps tentacles
around shards of glass.
Wednesday, April 14, 2010
Precious
Standing alone on deck, he thinks of those
buried somewhere far beneath him, precious as the stars
the treasure that no one tries to find
Tuesday, April 13, 2010
A poem starting with a line from Norman Dubie
Day 13: RWP wants us to use a line by the poet Norman Dubie to jumpstart a poem. I tried two:
The Persistence of Prayer (A poem starting with a line from Norman Dubie)
His chapel fell into flowers long ago
But prayers still hover above the ground
like mist, whispering to tree frogs and dandelions
and searching for masters
who now kneel on higher ground.
Once (A poem starting with a line from Norman Dubie)
Monday, April 12, 2010
Xenoglossy
Day 12: Bonus poem--another one that I think somewhat fits today's prompt:
Xenoglossy
I woke this morning knowing French,
And now as I drive the freeway
Listening to a book on tape,
I feel Dutch enter through my left ear,
Tagalog inching its way up my right calf.
German makes a beeline up my spine,
While Arabic traces along my fingers.
By the time I get to work,
My stomach is the Rosetta stone,
And I cannot keep down my coffee.
I Google for answers
As Urdu tickles my ribs
And Italian caresses my collarbone.
I find a case or two
Of language coming
Unbidden
Into a mind.
But nothing like this,
This invasion of the body
by conjugated verbs,
Accents and inflections,
Formal and familiar.
Yiddish taps insistently on my temples,
While Pig Latin sidles up a nostril,
Eskimo’s 32 words for snow
Filling my eyes like tears.
I fumble for the phone but it’s too late,
A thousand tribal tongues are beating in my heart,
Cherokee, Pygmy, Mohican, Semai,
I try to scream
But all that comes out is a garbled mess of
Swedish and Gujarati,
Swahili and Portuguese.
My coworkers speak to me,
But their words are like triangles
In a symphony.
And all at once it’s over.
It’s all inside me,
Every human language, living or dead.
I know thousands of words for love.
I know words for things I have never seen,
Ideas I will never understand.
I break into gestures,
Turning to an officemate
I know has a deaf son.
They rush me to the hospital
But there is no cure.
Doctors and psychologists
visit from far and wide
To examine me.
Reporters try to discredit me.
Pilgrims from all over the world
Come to hear me speak their language.
But at night I am always alone,
So I sing to myself in Japanese,
Chant prayers in Sanskrit,
Tell myself jokes in Moroccan,
And write the most beautiful poetry
No one can understand.
Have You Ever Seen?
Have You Ever Seen?
Flying blue poodles playing ukeleles
Leprechauns scaling redwood trees,
Fountain pens pirouetting atop wedding cakes,
An octopus riding a bike on the beach.
Cherubim opening stars with crystal keys,
Grape vines sprouting Rocquefort cheese,
Big-horned sheep bungee jumping from peaks,
Prufrock in blue jeans eating a peach.
Candles line dancing on confetti seas.
Wild geese drinking life to the lees.
Jasmine falling from malachite clouds,
The end of the rainbow just within reach.
Have you ever seen it?
Did you stop and stare?
Or were you too caught up in your reality
To even be aware.
Sunday, April 11, 2010
The Concert
Day 11: RWP prompt is to write about a choice you didn't make. Started out writing free verse but the rhymes kind of took over...
The Concert
I know you don’t remember asking,
You may not remember me,
But I wish I’d gone to that concert with you,
I wish I had that memory.
Nothing would be different,
At least nothing plain to the eye,
We would not have gotten married,
We would still have said goodbye.
You had a girlfriend after all,
Though we saw each other every day.
Nothing was better than making you laugh,
But I could never say
All the things I wanted to,
It simply wasn’t right.
Still I wish we’d shared good music
Saturday, April 10, 2010
Celebration Lovers Anonymous
Day 10: RWP suggested writing about a celebration...
Celebration Lovers Anonymous
Hello my name is Julie
And I’m a celebration-aholic.
Maybe it started with my first sip
Of champagne on New Year’s Eve.
At age 7, I drank the glass down all at once
the way I’d seen them do in movies,
My parents were horrified.
Then there was the candle
Atop my first birthday cake,
What’s more addictive than the promise
Of a granted wish.
The completion of an AP History exam
Meant pepperoni pizza, a rare treat indeed
For a vegetarian.
At my first job, we stood on our desks
And sang along with the radio after deadlines,
Our boss already out the door.
By the time I saw the big balloons on Thanksgiving,
I was totally hooked.
Marching bands, floats, red-nosed clowns,
I got high on them all.
My friends tried an intervention at the Millennium,
But I went to Times Square anyway,
Letting confetti cover me like snowflakes
As the ball dropped.
I’ll be honest, I don’t want to get help.
No, I plan to party until the end,
To go out in a burst of fireworks
or a pile-up of ticker-tape,
Laughing myself into the next life.
Friday, April 9, 2010
Journey
You have traveled far
From the hills of Balaram
To the capitals of Europe
To the golden shores
of your manifest destiny
Soles of your feet hard as rock,
Suitcase stuffed with photos.
But memory is elastic.
It stretches with each face,
Each name, each moment
Of breathless awe
At the foot of mountains
Or in the face of stars.
Thursday, April 8, 2010
Trick Candle
Painting perfect
picture of my birthday
Your arms wrapped
tight around me
Cliffside lighthouse,
Cobalt blue waves,
Starfish-strewn sands,
and clouds kayaking
Across a placid sky.
In the liquid glass light
I look happy, so do you.
There with the world
laid out behind us
everything seemed
so right, so new.
But you turned out to be
a trick birthday candle
that still won't go out,
a wish that refused to come true.
Wednesday, April 7, 2010
Even Now
Spitting cherry seeds
out the window of your car
laughter reaching out
like the endless road ahead
even now it makes me smile
Tuesday, April 6, 2010
Mermaid
Mermaid
If only I could be so focused.
Her long, tangled tresses
have the beautiful disarray
of brain synapses.
Her tail is a rippling lake
reflecting falling stars.
Her face glows with the gentle fierceness
Of creation
as she gazes at the baby in a bubble
floating between her cupped hands.
If only my light would shine like hers,
make even the murkiest of places
nothing to fear.
If only a rainbow garden grew
out of whatever I planted.
When I asked my parents how I was born
They said they prayed for a daughter.
If only that's all it took.
If only life could be conjured like poetry,
my power to create subject only
to my strength of purpose
not the slipperiness of love.
Monday, April 5, 2010
Name
He is a lover
who doesn’t come over for months sometimes
No matter how much I long for him.
He appears without warning,
Saunters in, tosses off his hat,
Grabs me by the arms,
Pushes me up against the wall
And takes me,
So fast and sure
it’s only after
He leaves without so much
as a sideways glance, I realize
I forgot again
To ask him his name.
Sunday, April 4, 2010
Junk Drawers
I keep many things I don’t have to.
The plastic ring the first boy I liked
won me at the school carnival.
The cowrie shell-covered change purse
where I stored perfume samples
that came with my mother’s Christmas gifts,
amber ampules of elegance.
The first bankbook I ever had,
when $314 seemed enough for college.
I keep the compliments
from the Christmas party
when I wore the red velvet dress.
The words he whispered to me
before I drove away the last time.
The wind on my face
on the swing in that deserted park,
when nothing was certain
Saturday, April 3, 2010
Us
Friday, April 2, 2010
Rain Water Pipe
After five years they made her let go
of his socks, his aftershave,
the work papers she read at night sometimes
when it was too cold to sleep alone.
His handwriting comforted her
even if the formulas were gibberish.
She could never bear to read
the love letters they let her keep.
They even replaced the leaky rain water pipe
he’d insisted on installing himself,
though she begged them not to.
Now her home is filled
with juicers and grills
and closet organizers she can never find,
clothes she never wears,
Thursday, April 1, 2010
The Things I've Carried
Day 1: I followed the prompt on readwritepoem.org, which said to choose five songs at random (using shuffle) and use the titles in a poem. The five songs that came up were:
*Stop to Love—Luther Vandross
*In My Life—Les Miserables soundtrack
*Mona Lisas and Mad Hatters—Elton John
*Everybody is a Star—The Pointer Sisters
*These Arms of Mine—Otis Redding
This seemed like it would be easier than it was. Here's the poem:
The Things I've Carried
If you could see all
These arms of mine have held
You’d know I’m not a poor woman
Despite the holes in my life.
Bodies, yes, but emptiness too,
Have slept in my embrace,
I’ve danced with Mona Lisas and mad hatters
And carried my broken shoes home
Past off-duty cabs and empty newsstands
On this glittering isle
Where everybody is a star
That cannot find the sky.
I will follow the yellow brick road home now
Keep holding onto these dreams alone
Unless you make me stop
To love you.