You can have the dogs and cats,
But as for the horse,
Let’s cut her in half.
I’ll take my piece
And trade it for money.
A melancholy story, mostly true,
But he won’t halve her
By the time we’re through.
04 Friday Aug 2023
Posted in Poetry
15 Sunday May 2022
Posted in Poetry
Tags
Children, Division, Divorce, Family, Hate, Healing, Life, Longing, Loss, Love, Love Poems, Marriage, Memory, Mothers, Poem, Poems, Poetry, Sacred, Self, Souls, Women's Poems, Yearning
The push, and pull, of memory,
When you left me I got sadness, despair,
When I left you, I got amnesia.
Be careful what you forget,
Memories, hostage to one another,
Shoved into the abyss, together they go,
What was beautiful, too,
The joy of holding his babies at my breasts,
The sound of love in first words;
Hope, like a childhood dream,
You’re embarrassed you believed.
And now, no plumbing the hole
With dirty hands, arms not long enough
To reach what was so easily given away;
(The hurt was not traded for living,
As I’d hoped,) no, I want them all back,
Though they bring you, with the sadness, too.
26 Wednesday Jan 2022
Posted in Poetry
Tags
Broken, Children, Division, Divorce, Family, Forgiveness, Life, Loss, Love, Poem, Poems, Poetry, Snake River

I’d be lying, if I said I didn’t know,
Years of turmoil, like a river,
With a dangerous undertow.
Like swimmers, outside their boat,
Unable to swim, thrown against rocks.
We were young, and bound together
By our children. Then, the talk:
You don’t love me, he said,
And, rather than saying it wasn’t true,
I asked, what does love have to do
With being married? We have kids.
We were pulled over, under a bridge,
Which spans the mighty Snake River.
We were both wrong, but does it matter?
Self-fulling, breakup chatter–
Prelude to the email I would find–
Betrayal, is not a kind way to end.
Twenty years later, still not friends,
Yet, we are friendly in our pain.
The sting of loss, defines a sting,
And taints our world, a broken thing.
09 Friday Oct 2020
Posted in Poetry
Tags
Anger, Chaos, Civil War, CoronaVirus, Covid19, Death, Death Poems, Division, Fear, Fighting, Hate, Hope, hopelessness, Life, Longing, Loss, Memory, Napa, normal, Poem, Poems, Poetry, politics, Smoke Taint, Sonoma, Survival, Wine, Yearning

What does fire taste like in the glass,
Our fear, red with hate, the flames
of civil war? The skin, and the smoke,
cannot be divided; they say
it tastes like ash, what is left
when the smoke clears.
We can see the devastation.
Remnants of a vineyard;
what was there, before tragedy
made our eyes cry with anger.
The tree and native grasses
are poured out, consumed together,
while the vine exists in water it stored,
but cannot save its fruit.
Its creation, aging in the hot fog
of dreams. Life was supposed to be
the taste of flowers, plums, currants,
and only hints of tobacco,
swirled in our glass.
29 Monday Jun 2020
Tags
Alone, CoronaVirus, Covid19, Death, Division, Grace, Gratitude, Healing, Hope, Huckleberries, Life, Loneliness, Love, Mercy, Poem, Poems, Poetry, Sacred, Souls, Strength, Survival, Wilderness

And then the world said,
I will heal you
In ferns, unfurling again,
berries, growing ripe
On the bows of yesterday,
the ones your hands touched,
As you harvested the wild fruit.
This is my great forest of chatter,
it says, in a smattering of late flowers,
a fragrant, maskless breeze,
and trees you can touch with bare hands.
Speak to the sky, it cajoles,
And the sky will answer you back,
With its bold booms, and its wet clouds,
none of this needs viewed
from behind the doom of plexiglass.
The young clerk, who looked down,
and down, and down, faceless,
behind the many layers of protection.
He was humankind, afraid to look up,
afraid to touch, or speak,
or even see one another.
But the world said,
I remain the same, fully open to you.
See me, and I will heal you.
17 Sunday Mar 2019
Tags
Afterlife, Beauty, Chaos, Courage, Death, Death Poems, Division, Dying, Fear, Freedom, Hate, Loss, Poem, Poems, Poetry, politics, Sadness. Sorrow, Soul, Spirit, Suffering
Can you be in awe
of how much some
are expected to suffer
in this lifetime—
we are often given
more than we can—
I saw a moth
with a broken wing,
and though it struggled,
I could not crush it—
but placed him, instead,
among the leaves of jasmine,
and walked away.
18 Friday Jan 2019
Posted in Poetry
Digging up some of my oldies about war. My thoughts and feelings have not changed.
O, Beautiful,
January 13, 2007
Does the sand, there,
pile up like snow, here
Do grains of it rise like sun
floating crystals in a fickle breeze
Is its heat as unbearable
as our winter freeze
which makes a trickle stream,
thickens the water in the trough
I ask you, is the desert there
as beautiful as our plains,
as beautiful as winter wheat
snow covered, before amber waves,
as wide-open to life, as willing
when we lay down and die
These poems were based on news clippings from the time.


Sela-hammahlekoth (gorge of divisions)
We stand at the sela-hammahlekoth,
great gorge of division,
and we will not be sacrificed;
It will grow wider and deeper,
we’ll each back from the precipice,
further and further from one another
until, finally, we cannot see,
reach out to, or remember
we loved. My Lord, My Lord:
why have we have forsaken
each other, our sisters, our brothers?
WMD
This morning, over coffee, we argued about the war,
All this after the bed and what happened there,
When he loved me and said so.
Yesterday we worked together
Cleaned ovens, sprayed the deck,
Installed lights and tore down the bedroom wall.
We laughed over a movie and popcorn,
Surveyed our lives together and said,
This is good.
But this morning,
over coffee,
we argued—
We argued about the war and WMD
And now I’m here at my computer
And he’s off
on his own,
Fixing the furnace.
22 Saturday Dec 2018
Posted in Uncategorized
Tags
country, Cows, Division, Flag, half-mast, Kneeling, Life, mourning, Pain, Poem, Poems, Poetry, politics, Unity, USA
2009: A flag at half-mast, waving
proudly over a little hill
to the east of our house.
My husband and I pass it
on our daily walk,
and wonder who has died.
Imagine: a dirt road, fences
that demarcate ten acre plots,
meat cows, meaning dairy cows,
unfortunate to be born boys,
and given the names T-bone,
Ribeye, and Sirloin Steak.
All three, sold for forty-five dollars
to the man who waves the flag,
everyday, at half-mast.
He’s a good man,
which some would say
is a man in his seventies, a navy vet, a Christian.
All three boxes, checked off.
He also cares for his wife,
who suffered a stroke
brought on by a brain tumor.
She’s in a wheel chair,
she has difficulty remembering words,
she’s a bit judgmental–
musters enough words to let me know
she doesn’t care for my cooking.
I try to be empathetic—
Neighbors, what a strange thing,
thrown together by proximity, land,
houses, maybe a view.
What brought you there,
the only thing you have in common.
But there you are with all your need.
That year, we had the snowiest season ever,
ninety three point six inches,
but no tractor. That meant two feet of snow
in our driveway and kids needing
to get to school, us to work.
Would you believe me if I told you
that same man, that man
flying his flag, everyday at half-mast,
was out in our driveway at six am,
clearing a path to the barn,
clearing a path to the road?
We didn’t even ask it of him,
wouldn’t have thought to ask it.
I imagine you’re wondering,
why I keep saying– he flew the flag at half mast,
but maybe you already guessed
it was because he disapproved the president,
felt the choice would ruin the country.
Thus, a nation in mourning–
when really, it was only him mourning.
It was him saying, I hurt
because of your choice. I ache,
because you voted for a man I opposed.
(Maybe he was saying he was pissed off, too.)
It’s just a flag,
but at half-mast, in my mind,
it became a division:
the day I walked our pony down the road,
and she escaped me and ran
to the base of his flagpole,
the nights the great horned owl
perched on his flagpole
hunting our cats,
the snow days from school,
ten of them that year,
where our kids, and his grandkids,
rode sleds and snowboards down the hill,
while one would stand and look for cars
under his hurting flag.
The flag wouldn’t come back up,
not until his wife died and the house sold,
and his meat cows were replaced
with more meat cows and a horse operation–
and, because it was 2016, a new president
the half-mast man would approve,
but would make others hurt, ache,
kneel, and fly their own flags,
on their own flagpoles, at half-mast.
12 Wednesday Dec 2018
Posted in Uncategorized