Sometimes life gives honey
and other times, stings;
Sometimes we need roots—
and other times, wings.
popular
Saguaro arms
a shrug, a hug
touchdown, letdown
waving, curling, sprouting
disco, vogue; praise, prayer
bird-pecked, green-specked
skeletonized, or multiplied
flower and fruity fingered
flipped, frail, or fallen off
perfected, nested, crested
Plexus
we feel poetry and art
in the sensitive veins
that run through soul and
carry not blood but spirit
Winter’ish
In Phoenix, Jack Frost doesn’t nip — he just tickles.
Freedumb
To burn one book is to burn the entire library.
Sudden silence
The death of a loved one is a sudden silence — one of those deafening silences that leaves ringing in
Balancing act
Renewal
sorry, no autumn this year —
earth didn’t pay the subscription fee
after the free trial of summer ended
Resilient
The best faith is not the stagnant,
Vital
You are as important to your health as it is to you.
Beary much
There’s nothing like a mama-hug.
Flight path
I look out my office window
working too late, again
The half-moon is round
with a glowing halo —
I know it’s pollution but
my heart sees fairy dust
or the happily ever after
romance of a bedtime story
And next to the bright moon
with its fringe of murky light
soars a large airplane
with its lights flashing
and I can hear its engine
even with my windows closed
(it’s hot outside, otherwise —
you know darn well —
I would open them!)
The plane’s lights —
red, green, white orbs
of unsightly technological safety —
are ruining the beautiful night sky
and distracting me from
my dusty fairy-tale moon
Yet maybe
at last
I realize
what’s been
obscuring
my poetic vision
I always seem to focus
on that beautiful moon
and the romantic dark sky
but ignore the 737 monstrous
hunk of metallic civilization
hurling itself through the night,
followed by a second aircraft
and then a third and fourth,
as if the airport is shooing
all her noisy little children
out of the house to play —
And even though that airplane
is hideous and loud
and aerial anti-serenity —
it’s life.
And what is poetry —
if not life?
Perhaps it carries
newlywed lovers
who were finally married
after COVID cancellations,
leaving on the honeymoon
they saved up years for —
and in that plane
is just as much fairy tale
as that beautiful-ugly
dust veiling the moon.
A final breath in winter
Dying ain’t pretty. Death is beautiful.