for Shay's Word List. I used ten of the words, and this just wrote itself. Cool list, Shay.
Poetry, memoir,blogs and photographs from my world on the west coast of Canada.
for Shay's Word List. I used ten of the words, and this just wrote itself. Cool list, Shay.
From Wild Writing - Day One. Inspired by the poem "How We Are Not Alone" by Maya Stein.
The earth said
remember me.
The earth said
don't let go.....*
The whales say the sea is too warm.
The polar bears say there is no ice.
The trees say "we thirst", yet,
some miles away, the highways
are all turning into rivers.
We poets used to write about wonder:
sunrises, sunsets, magical blooms,
and now our poems are full of warnings:
lower emissions! plant more trees!
The news is full of bombs and shattered buildings,
of drought and famine, wildfires and floods,
like the prophecies of end times
have come to pass
and hold us in their grasp.
Yet, out there, and all around,
there is still the wild world,
lit with radiant glow,
telling us: remember me.
Telling us: don't let go.
for earthweal where we are contemplating the poetry of Jorie Graham, and what our job as poets is during the escalating climate crisis. *The italicized lines are hers.
The challenge was to take the first line from the first poem of each month in 2022 and create a poem. It is interesting that a theme emerges from this exercise.
They see me hobbling down the street,
tap tap tapping my cane,
just like my grandma did,
when I walked her back to the old folks' home,
that single tear rolling down her cheek,
her life reduced, no longer
to her liking.
I am luckier than her, or braver.
I chose my dream,
then flew by the seat of my pants
to keep it alive.
It cost me, and aged me,
and slowed me down,
yet here I am, still,
in the place of my dreams.
They see me hobbling down the street
- tap tap tap -
and give me that smile
that people give the old,
as if life and dreams are all over
and I am suspended, just waiting
out my days.
Yet, all the time,
I am remembering:
the cottonwoods, the crickets,
the lazy summer bees,
and us making love
on the side of a mountain,
on the soft, brown, dried out
pine needles,
your dark eyes beautiful,
looking down,
the cerulean sky above.
How to stay balanced in a world
where bombs are falling on the innocent
and, a thousand miles away,
a basket of sweet puppies
are sleeping by the hearth
where two people are sipping tea
and smiling?
How to find reason
in the way governments speak lovely words
in silver tones, about how well
they are governing, and the deified Economy
that rules us all, while thousands
are homeless, thousands more without
fresh water, and the medical system
is on the brink of collapse?
How to trust leaders
when domestic terrorists
have infiltrated government
and there is no reason in their
fevered fanatical eyes?
I sit under a peaceful sky,
in my comfortable rooms,
in a beautiful place
on Planet Earth,
and all over the world
living beings are struggling to survive
cataclysmic conditions.
I feel like a human sensor,
trembling and attuned
to every garbled frequency.
I register it all -
the beauty and the pain,
the peace and the unwellness
of Mother Earth,
a paradox of pain and pleasure
in the Valley of the Broken-Hearted.
After Above the Paradox Valley by Rosemerry Wahtola Trommer.
Inspired by Sorrow Is Not My Name by Ross Gay.
For earthweal where we are contemplating Ministering the Future, and turning a radical edge or corner in a poem. Today's email exchange with my young poet friend in Africa sparked this response. Everywhere, the most innocent are suffering the most.