(im)permanence: what i learned in elementary school

there was always sun
& the rhythm of seasons
in shortening & lengthening light
falling & rising temperature
patterns set as days,
the stubborn optimism
of each sunrise;
the slow showy fade into twilight
at its setting.  the insistence
of spring & the inevitability of ice

this was before i learned
we could punch holes
in the atmosphere, before I could spell
atmosphere & ozone, before
carbon had footprints
& garbage just went somewhere else,
before i understood
the ground beneath my feet
could shudder & split open
like a melon & that sun,
that constant thing
could some day go out
with a snap like a burned out bulb
& no replacing it

i came home from school
& told my mother what fragile things
we counted on.  she laughed
& told me not to worry, that we both
would end long before the world did,
as if that was any comfort
for a ten-year-old

because instead of worrying about the planet
i could now think instead about us,
our own very real fragility

Posted in New Free Verse | Tagged , , , | 24 Comments

haiku heights: birth

equinox, mabon
the wheel balances & turns
from birth to fading

there is evenness
between light and dark today,
the birth of autumn

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Urban Jungle Blues

By Noel A. Ihebuzor and Susan L. Daniels

Another wandering day finds worn out minds
worrying on a wavering road wound tightly around anxious
feet lost and soles tired, tiring,
endless stomping, souls emptying, core eroding
trapped penniless in hard bone want
rides and crosses opulence heaving full breasted
never meeting anywhere or nowhere, desert islands, different
indifference, whether in narrow winding slums spawning hovels, grime, crime and anomie or in suffocating metallic structures that pierce the sky
seated on wide arteries on gridlocked checker boards
where automobiles choke the lungs with fumes of affluence,

Here, this city no longer smells of steel galvanizing
but oats baking into cereal O’s, and the main street
pedestrian mall frames four tracks for trains that do nothing
but run from the banks to the university
in a 30-year straight line, all the stores closed
except pharmacies, pawn shops, Chinese take-out,
stores that sell bright synthetic shoes for drag queens and prostitutes
or lottery tickets, cigarettes, and beer

The city sprawls, growls, as grim faces with automated smiles
and ATM voices greet and grit set teeth
co-travellers on the subway, rush without seeing, not feeling
and when seeing move on before sunshine thaws well frozen
protector shields of indifference and anonymity
to open a space now dreaded in this place where we pace
in a metal jungle of tubular bars, well rehearsed smiles,
a maze that breathes fear
behind stale glass windows or airless hovels
that color eyes and imprison minds
and minds stagnate in the stupor of sterile promises
that become hazier as mind become heavier, and stubborn dreams
slowly tip to cheap end points, needles, skins, threads and ropes

This is my downtown, my city of brown and black faces
strangled by surrounding white arms, where all the jobs grow
past the bus lines and reverse commutes from suburb to suburb;
but still in this heart blocked by abandoned factories
rises an energy.  Students fill the coffeehouses and jazz clubs,
wrapped in black, borrowed sophistication after a night
in the theatre district or gallery parties, and warehouses shift to lofts
and still more galleries, pop-up shows mushrooming between the cracks of sidewalks

like brilliant intoxicating fungi
as street festivals paint the air
with basil and cinnamon, mixing with those oats

urban centres call
sell hopes that reach for a sky
darkened by hard hearts

those sidewalks

littered landscaping
of trash cans never emptied
dreams full of promise

so emptying

***As always, this was fun!  I am the voice in italics, Noel’s voice is in regular type.

Posted in duet, duet with Noel Ihebuzor, Duets with Noel Ihebuzor | Tagged , | 15 Comments

for the Iranian woman who kicked the cleric who told her to cover up

 

in a place
where it is easier
to force women to hide their bodies
than it is
to expect men to avert their eyes,
what did she show
on the street
to make him ask her to cover herself?
was it the curve of her wrist
sliding seductively into forearm

escaping for a moment
the heat of her sleeve
as she bought oranges

or was it an inch
of her neck, suggesting
in length and grace
more beauty hidden

beneath that coat?

where even looking
is a sin,
& walking on the street
uncovered
an enticement
she told him to cover his eyes

in a place where to be raped
is to commit adultery
where even showing
the curve of a smile
is seduction
they must sweat, covered in coats
and dark colors under sun.  when she shouted,
when she kicked him, it was for them, the women
obscured and weighted down
so they escape the light brush of eyes
on skin, those women who cannot speak,
who should never be seen,
who lower their heads
and walk quickly

 

Posted in New Free Verse | Tagged , , , | 26 Comments

haiku heights: glory

fall starts in glory–
summer dies & burns quiet
in layers i rake

Posted in haiku, haiku heights prompt | Tagged , | 37 Comments

a series of moments

mint should never be driven
to grow taller than corn stalks.  still,
here it is, flowering higher than my forehead
and wide-leaved, still tasting of mint
though my neighbors call it yerba buena
& tell me to make tea, or bathe in it
because there is medicine mixed in the leaves.
mystical or not, i dry the plant carefully
& without heat, hung upside-down
to save the volatile oils
my skin carries casually from bruised stems
i should call stalks.

next to the mint, the sage seems small
though it is more bush than plant.  i use it for chicken
or pesto, or burning.  all herbs
grow impossibly tall in this valley, as if
they are fed milk at the full moon.  but they
aren’t–they grow tall in black glacier gravel soil
threaded with leaf mold–spelled simply by
gardening rituals of planting and hoping.

if there is mystery in herb growing
it is for me a series of moments;
the peace of planting,
the needling work of tending, or
satisfaction pressed into
frozen or dried preservation.

the names soothe with music that is spoken, or hummed
by bees visiting lemon balm, also called melissa for
whom it draws, and the other herbs:  rosemary,
basil, chervil, several thymes, dill, chives, parsley;
each name with a scent & memory etched just so
deep in the brain, unforgotten.

***at Dverse today, we are talking about solitude–the quiet moments in life, so I decided to write about my herbs/therapy :).  Hope you join us over there today!

English: A can of peppermint infusion. Deutsch...

English: A can of peppermint infusion. Deutsch: Eine Kanne Pfefferminztee von frischen Blättern. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

Posted in New Free Verse | Tagged , , | 69 Comments

she says she thinks too loudly

she says she thinks too loudly
& I know what she means.  my blood
shouts until the words come
formed deep & rising
in wheals through skin

not all words are mine.
not all love poems
have our names written
in invisible ink
between the lines
but i can dream us there

if i don’t write
i wear the words
or chant prayers
to forgotten gods
in my dreams

***partially inspired by Mari, of the loud thoughts.

Posted in New Free Verse | Tagged , , | 20 Comments