Monday, December 25, 2023

Geode

He hath no form nor comeliness; and when we shall see him, there is no beauty that we should desire him.

I cry 

reading Imogene Herdman

to my daughter;


I cry

channeling Mr. Krueger

in my response

when she asks,

“Why are you crying?”

and consoles,

“Just let it out, dude.”


I cry

playing piano while primary kids,

like my nose-picking 5-year-old,

sing “Away in a Manger.”


I cry

singing “Silent Night”

next to my teenage son

still dialing in his bassoprano voice. 


I cry

hearing an 11-year-old Isaiah

read “Wonderful, Counselor…”

to his daydreaming Sunday school class.


Is it because

these instances juxtapose

the comic with the divine

that they

sucker punch me?


The ridiculous collisions

fracturing the familiar

to reveal 

inarticulable epiphanies?


Dirt-clod exteriors 

giving way

to something else

clearer 

inside?


Monday, November 13, 2023

Renku - Stationary Fireworks

 Renku - Stationary Fireworks


Renku is a form of collaborative Japanese poetry, and it eventually gave birth to the haiku form. This poem is a series of haikus posted by members of my family on our GroupMe conversation, inspired by a picture my dad posted of our backyard in fall using the words “stationary fireworks” to describe it. The phrase itself sounds poetic, and once we noticed it had 7 syllables (the length of the middle line of a haiku), the rest was inevitable. 


 


October colors bring

Stationary fireworks

My heart and eyes sing.


Midwest autumn is

stationary fireworks.

Celebrating what?


Slowly exploding 

Stationary fireworks

Ignite the water. 


Colors bang loudly!

Stationary fireworks 

Only I can hear.


Forest sprites light off

Stationary fireworks. 

One final hurrah. 


4th of November. 

Stationary fireworks. 

Liberty then death. 


Fall freely feels fun!

Stationary fireworks

Make my spirit run.


Crisp, frozen colors -

Stationary fireworks.

Who arranged it all?


What is this for, these

Stationary fireworks?

Where’s the barbecue?


Alone, I'm entranced.

Stationary fireworks 

Set my heart ablaze.


I must away now.

Stationary fireworks -

Stay to play again?


A cavalcade of

Stationary fireworks - 

A bulwark of joy. 


What does one eat with

Stationary fireworks?

Turkey barbecue.


Quiet explosions.

Stationary Fireworks.

A symphony observed.


Whenever you shoot

Stationary fireworks,

Keep a pond nearby. 


Vacuuming light from

stationary fireworks

with my lawnmower.




Beauty in the sky.

Stationary fireworks -

Blurred reality


God put in motion 

Stationary fireworks

For a day like this.


I watch the forest -

Stationary fireworks.

And so Fall begins!


Backyard magic glows.

Stationary fireworks - 

What a Godly gift


Imagining home,

Stationary fireworks

Send warm winds my way.


Fireflies' glow ends.

Stationary fireworks -

A new light begins.


Delight is fleeting.

Stationary fireworks

Last a bit longer.


Country living perks:

Stationary fireworks -

One of Nature's quirks.


Tuesday, September 19, 2023

Hey Alexa


“Do you want to say your prayer

before I start the sleepcast?”

I asked my daughter.


“Sure,” she said.

“Hey Alexa…”


Quickly recovering,

she tried again.

“Dear Heavenly Father…”

and on she went

but not before my mind

had taken a tangent


which led to a

post-apocalyptic tribal wasteland:


She is the widowed matron

of a small clan -

children, grandchildren, cousins, neighbors, orphans -

flitting between fleeting senses of safety.


At night, she gathers the young

while the strong stand guard

and tells stories of

lessons from Sunday school

mixed with memories of home.


Both

a creative and loving God

and an electronic communicative algorithm

are equally far fetched

to my grubby great-grandchildren.


“Will they believe

in either

or both?”

I wonder,

trying to recall

when I was 9


if I had folded my arms at church

and recited the pledge of allegiance


or if I had stood in front of the flag at school

and started, “Dear Heavenly Father.”


I’ll have to tell her that story

the day after tomorrow.


Thursday, August 31, 2023

Who is driving at 2:34 in the morning?

Who is driving at 2:34 in the morning?

One suspects participants

in some unsavory activities. 


As for myself

“unsavory” suits the circumstance:

An inconsolable three-year-old

non-stop screaming while tent camping 

moved me to drive home at this unholy hour.


Not wanting to permanently wake my temporary neighbors

by tipping the first domino of the toddler alarm,

I whisked the screamer

through the downpour 

barefoot on gravel

into the arms of the carseat,

a device of previously insuperable soporific powers.

Alas, the straps and pads

and even the lulling rockabye of country road driving in the rain

all failed,


so I am left behind the wheel

wondering between screams

if my fellow travelers are steady insomniacs

(or one-night-standers like me)

or if they are demoniacs

(like my son). 


Who is being possessed at this hour 

to eschew beds for belts,

feather pillows for foam headrests?


Those bewitched by

Wanderlust?

White Castle cravings?

A sleep-hating child?


Whoever we are,

maybe not today,

and maybe not tomorrow

but at some point

yesterday

we were the ones

driving our parents

at 2:34 in the morning

crying:

I can’t help but be scared of it all sometimes.


But for now,

this rain’s gonna wash a way

for us to snuggle a few hours

in my bed

before he wakes up and asks,

“Where’s tent?”

with an incredulous look on his face.


I can’t  believe it. 


Sunday, July 9, 2023

#VirginiaIsForLovers

 

Only this state flag

includes, let alone features,

death - by sword and spear.


Only this state seal

threatens, in no unclear terms, 

death - and conquered crowns.


We rally around

not e pluribus unum1,

ad astra per aspera2,

qui transtulit sustinet3,

excelsior4, dirigo5,

montani semper liberi6,

si quaeris peninsulam amoenam - circumspice7,

or esto perpetua8,

but Death - to Tyrants9.


#VAisforlovers



1: out of many, one (North Dakota)

2: to the stars through difficulties (Kansas)

3: he who transplanted still sustains (Connecticut)

4: ever upward (New York)

5: I direct (Maine)

6: mountaineers are always free (West Virginia)

7: if you seek a pleasant peninsula look around (Michigan)

8: let it be perpetual (Idaho)
9: sic semper tyrannis (Virginia)



Monday, June 5, 2023

Plebeian Extravagance


For our 14th anniversary,

we ate 

at a swanky restaurant.


Though we were dressed up,

it was hard to disguise our rusting 

2007 Chrysler Town & Country

between the Mercedes and Wagoneers.


Sitting al fresco,

pretending not to know our minivan,

I thought of my grandpa

when I saw

rainbow trout

on the menu.


I mentioned my memories

of him fishing for such

to my wife,

and she wagered she knew

people who worked at the facility

that supplied the duck -

not paper pushers or upper management: 

pluckers.


Shout out to Maple Leaf Farms,

Kosciusko County, Indiana.


After ordering an appetizer

of tomato, mozzarella, and basil

as well as duck for her,

I requested the trout,

in honor of my grandpa,

wondering if he would be

impressed or embarrassed

at my $28 fish

compared to what he caught

and gutted and cooked and ate

for almost nothing

but time

in the mountains

and the kitchen

with family.


The strangers in the next table

ordered the $260 bottle of wine

I couldn’t pronounce.


I squeezed a second lemon wedge

into my refilled glass of water.


The single thickly cut tomato,

slabs of soft mozzarella,

and sprig of basil

nestled in seasoned olive oil

was composed mostly

of food he grew in his garden,

as were the beans,

roasted potatoes,

and half of an acorn squash

which accompanied my trout,

relieved of its innards and bones

but not its head,

its unblinking eye peering knowingly past my button-up.


It was the simplicity that struck me

but also the quality,

as if it had come from

my grandpa’s garden and pole.


“This chocolate cake is

almost like my mom’s

microwave brownie pudding,”

she interjected,

“but the ice cream definitely doesn’t touch 

what my dad makes for birthdays.”


I concurred

as I wondered

at the $109 bill,

excluding tip for waiter and valet parker,

who, to his credit,

kept a straight face

as “Diamonds on the Soles of Her Shoes” played

from our tape deck.


The cost of temporarily

experiencing a taste of the state

of simplicity, it appears,

is high.


Higher than the cost of living it?


Thank goodness we had a gift card.