Woodsmoke-scented air
Invokes peace, comfort, sacrifice
Nut-seeking squirrels scurry
Tentative deer appear, pricking their ears
Early night descends with a chill…
Retreat. Rest. Be still.

Woodsmoke-scented air
Invokes peace, comfort, sacrifice
Nut-seeking squirrels scurry
Tentative deer appear, pricking their ears
Early night descends with a chill…
Retreat. Rest. Be still.

One more post prompted by WordPress:
Talk about your father or the father figure in your life…
He has born in a tenant farmer’s house
one October afternoon
during the Great Depression
the first child of a sharecropper and his wife
a responsible boy
who loved chocolate
most of all his grandmother’s fudge
made especially for him
whenever he spent the night
listening to rain
dancing on the tin roof
like dozens of squirrel feet
a boy who took baths
in a galvanized tub
behind a curtain strung
from the heater
in the living room
(there was no indoor bathroom,
only an outhouse)
a boy who loved cars
who wrote about racing
a boy who loved planes
who grew up
to join the Air Force
(after graduating high school
as senior class president)
a young man far away from home
who learned to love
Mexican food
who returned to visit his grandmother
(Mama, he called her)
carrying her for a ride
in his new white Thunderbird
—Hold onto your snuff jar,
Mama
who eventually went to work
as a security guard
then marrying a girl
with big dark eyes
becoming father
a year and a half later
there are black-and-white photos
of me in his lap
wearing his hard hat
me sandwiched
between him and his father
on the sofa
all looking as serious
as the Culhanes
on Hee Haw
I can see him
sitting in the corner
rag in hand
shining his work shoes
I can still smell
the acrid black polish
from the little round tin
him taking me
to buy a parakeet I’d begged for
(I wanted the blue and white one
he said the yellow one looked better
so that’s the one we got)
the hall light coming on
late at night
when an asthma attack
had me wheezing
him coming to give me Benadryl
(it didn’t help)
him setting up the vaporizer
with Vick’s poured in the little tray
(it didn’t help)
many trips to
the ear, nose, and throat doctor
for allergy shots
(they didn’t help)
him sitting beside me
in the waiting room
(that helped
more than he ever knew)
him standing by
holding my doll
looking green
as an orthopedist pulled
and pulled
and pulled
my broken arm
to set it
intervening
like a bolt of lightning
when I screamed
him working every holiday
for the extra pay
him in his chair
watching Sonny and Cher
him telling me
after I married
that if I ever needed to
I could come home
him in a hospital bed
refusing to be taken to the OR
for coronary bypass surgery
until I arrived
and he saw me
him consequently
giving up cigarettes
for cigars
(surely that didn’t help)
him facing battles
that most people
still don’t know about
I knew
him giving me a cross necklace
at a family funeral
me wearing it to his
after he went
so suddenly
funny how
I find myself thinking now
of his scowl
and his warning
Get off your high horse
and his irritation
when I was small
Stop smearing!
(does anyone else
on Earth
use that phrase
for wasting time)
and all the neighborhood kids saying
Your dad is so strict
he was
but then there was his laugh
his love of silly jokes
him listening
while I played my Billy Joel album
and astonishing me
by saying he liked that song,
Stiletto
I bet it was the beat
twenty years now
he’s been gone
not seeing my boys grow up
missing so much
once in a while,
they stand like him
move like him
scowl like him
he’d be amazed by them
and fascinated by how
they like many things he did
such as some of
the same old-time music
his little great-granddaughter
who shares his birth month
will not know him
any more than I knew Mama
only a year in the world
and she loves music
and is already
something of a notorious scowler
her dad says
her head is shaped
just like Granddaddy’s
—the exact thing
you said about me
when I was born
but it’s not Granddaddy’s visage
I glimpse in the mirror these days
it’s yours
more and more
in so many ways, Daddy,
like all the stories
we lived
and every one
you told and retold
blood keeps pounding its rhythms
the beat goes on






As a follow-up to yesterday’s post, Exploring mysteries, here’s a list of questions that have magically appeared in my supposed-to-be-empty WordPress blog posts this month:
What is one thing that you would change about myself?
What are five things you’re good at?
Do you have a favorite place you’ve visited? Where is it?
What big events have taken place in your life over the last year?
What could you do less of?
Have you ever performed on stage or given a speech?
Tell about your first day at something—school, work, as a parent, etc.
What skills or lessons have you learned recently?
Is your life today where you pictured it a year ago?
All you writer-friends out there know the power of a good prompt for overcoming writer’s block, for reaching far and deep, tapping into memory and emotion. Writing itself is a release. It is healing. Perhaps even preventive medicine. Writing is a unique means of expression, of thinking, of creativity, of craftsmanship. It is a singular key for unlocking many mysteries, the greatest of all being yourself.
When gifts are offered, take them…they’re meant for your benefit, enjoyment, edification. The WordPress elves at work behind the scenes here clearly know this. These prompts are likely meant to be answered one by one (I have written to two: one thing I would change about myself and what skills I’ve learned recently) but today I wonder if I could tie them all into one reflection. For better or worse, here goes…
It is said that change is constant. I am constantly changing, growing older, a little slower. I would not change this. It is the price of having been alive a while. I’m willing to pay it. What one thing would I change about myself? My answer now would be different than it would have been years ago. I might have chosen something superficial, having to do with my appearance. Now I am much more concerned with my spirit. How do I narrow what I’d change to just one thing? I should choose to be more gracious, patient, forgiving, even loving…but as I write, the word listen blankets everything else that comes to mind. I would listen to others more. Not with my ears. With my soul. To hear what lies behind their words, their actions. Words are a thing I’m good with, usually. Were I to comprise a list of five things I’m good at, words are linked to at least half of it: I’m good at reading, writing (so I’m told…I do love it and work at it), imagining, wondering, and drinking coffee. In a way these are the five pillars of my daily life, the things I enjoy most, next to time spent with my family. When my boys were small my grandmothers told me that I was a good mother. Their simple proclamation, a revelation of their great esteem for motherhood, felt like the bestowment of a royal title. My boys have the final say, however. Children know all their parents’ flaws, eventually. What matters is that they know how much they are loved and that they learn to love. It is the beginning of belonging. It is why, when asked if I have a favorite place, I’m always going to talk about my grandparents’ home deep in the countryside, along an old dirt road (it’s gravel now). I haven’t been since the house has been torn down and a new one built for a young family. While I dread going because of that, another part of me desperately longs to go…to walk the old road once more, to remember being a child, hearing my grandmother’s old, old stories and my grandfather’s raspy, warm I love you when he offered his clean-shaven cheek to me for a goodnight kiss… again, listen. I imagine sensing them near even if all I hear is the breeze rustling the Spanish moss which wasn’t there, hanging there from the treetops, when I was a child. Once upon a time, though, there were little bridges along the road, due to the many canals…I don’t know what became of those bridges. But the tiny church at the crossroads remains, where my grandparents are buried with generations of my ancestors. One day soon, I must go. I carry them all and their stories with me… I am their story, the continuation of it, as my granddaughters are mine. They are the greatest event of my life in the last three years, one coming into our family at age three and the other born just over a year ago. They are the big event of my every day. I can almost hear Grandma chuckling…now you understand. Listen, listen. Carve time away from the clamor of the world to be still…to minimize distractions, to be fully present when another human is speaking to me, especially my young ones, especially my quiet son with the musical gifts and beautiful singing voice. So many layers there. Listen. I need to be less concerned with work; it is my livelihood, not my life. The family is my life. My pastor-husband, my pastor-son and his girls, The Boy and his music and funeral ministry, all our dogs, the church, the faith, the Lord God, Giver of all good gifts, including life, are my life. How perfect are His ways. Long ago when I was performing in plays and traveling to audition for acting school in New York, I could not have dreamed it would lead me to where I am now, that at nineteen I’d meet the man I’d marry through community theater. The title of that play: Whose Life Is It Anyway? Not just mine. Ours. It was ordained. I had an inkling of it, that first day after we were married, when we stood in the crashing ocean waves and I held onto my new gold wedding band for dear life, for fear of losing it. I knew salt isn’t good for jewelry. I just couldn’t bring myself to remove the ring. New beginnings are so fragile at first. As are new ideas. All these years into our journey, we still look for the new even within the old: we are going to learn how to use that Dobsonian telescope I got us for Christmas. We shall soon be wandering among the stars, Saturn, Jupiter, Mars, all extending their glittering invitation every cold, cold night. I just learned I wasn’t using the finderscope properly. How poetic. Metaphorical. That’s what writing is for me… a finderscope. Through it I see the memories, the gratitude, the loves of my life…the light from years past, still meeting me right where I am today; I would not change a thing about that.
*******
with thanks to WordPress for the magical prompts and to Two Writing Teachers for the story-sharing place.
Happy holidays to all.

Imagine my recent astonishment on sitting down to compose a blog post and finding a question already typed into the empty template…I wrote about this occurrence in The question.
Every day since, a new question has appeared in my empty post template, as if my Muse has suddenly taken control of WordPress. Some magic or benevolent ghost is surely at work here…thank you, whoever and whatever you are. I am compiling your daily questions for future use. I shall respond to today’s: “What skills or lessons have you learned recently?”
I am learning, Oracle-esque Blog, even as I write this post with a dozen windows open behind it, how to operate a Dobsonian reflector telescope.
Here’s why:
December nights
Mars, Jupiter, and Saturn
shine bright
beckoning:
Mere mortal
made of stardust
(for all humans are)
—come and see
our infinite mystery…
And so I must
before my temporal self
sleeps in Earth’s crust
Stay tuned on this astronomical adventure, friends…

In passing judgment
lies the fatal forgetting
that a saint, you ain’t

It is said that
instruction should begin
at the edge of understanding
I know this edge
where the solid ground ends
and the unknown begins
all certainty suspended
as the mists roll in
obscuring the chasm
before me
I would linger here
until the end of my days
on the foundations that
sustained me thus far
if not for the Guide
speaking one step
at a time
into being
only materializing
when I place my foot
forward
to find a firmness
beneath
before I can
fully see
a little
of the mist clears
while the edge
on which I’m standing
under construction
is expanding

At the Edge of the Caldera… ER’s Eyes – Our planet is beautiful. CC BY-NC-SA 2.0.
Confession:
obsession
with phone app revelations
in the star-studded sky
and even straight through
the ground
to the other side
of Earth
satellite after satellite
and occasional
rocket bodies
littering space
for just a second
everything pales
in a stab of wild imagining
what if
they’re not all ours


Photos of my SkyView app looking beyond the other side of Earth tonight
to the constellation Virgo.
Note how long these particular rocket bodies have been in space.
a reverso poem
Such stars
you are
I tell the children
after they sing
fitted for heaven
they are
in the season
of stars
of song
of wonder
there is a scent
of snow
just a hint
in the air
a sense of an angel’s hem
in the air
just a hint
of snow
there is a scent
of wonder
of song
of stars
in the season
they are
fitted for heaven
after they sing
I tell the children
you are
such stars

I saw
just one
quick flare
of the Geminid
meteor shower
a streak of light
quick and bright
there and gone
like a time-lapsed
cigarette tip lit
and stubbed out

Leonids Meteor Shower (Nov 18 [2014]. NASA’s Marshall Space Flight Center. CC BY-NC 2.0.
Eighty-six years ago
they married
during the Great Depression
with war on the rise
they meant for the ceremony
to be in September
but he had the mumps
so the wedding occurred
on the twelfth of December
before the justice of the peace
she wore a blue suit
on the day after Christmas
she turned twenty-one
Every December after
he gave her
a red poinsettia
he knew
how much she loved them
Across the decades
she’d jest about
having nothing
to look forward to
the rest of the year
with her anniversary
Christmas
and birthday all
in the same month
December
for her
was pure delight
celebrations
of Light
and life
In the last years
when he was gone
I gave her
a red poinsettia
during the season
for the sight
of her face alight
blue eyes bright
Someone else gave her
a silk poinsettia
after she went into
the nursing home
once when I visited
she was watering it
We did not know
all those years ago
that their wedding anniversary
would become
National Poinsettia Day
I just learned it
how she’d love it
just another sign
that love is divine
and lives on and on
and on

My grandparents, on my first Christmas.
Love lives on.

Photo: National Day Calendar