You haven’t really seen yourself
until you’ve seen yourself dancing
on a Jumbotron. Ninety five hundred
people cheering as you floss your hips
through your arms, and smile
like the victor, the barbarian
who captured the eye
of the camera in the sky.
20 Sunday Jan 2019
Posted in Poetry
You haven’t really seen yourself
until you’ve seen yourself dancing
on a Jumbotron. Ninety five hundred
people cheering as you floss your hips
through your arms, and smile
like the victor, the barbarian
who captured the eye
of the camera in the sky.
18 Friday Jan 2019
Posted in Poetry
Tags
Authenticity, Imitation, Materialism, Pinterest, Poem, Poems, Poetry
Pretty sure
I’ve seen this Reveal Party before,
and yes, it’s perfect, as if
Oh shit, how did this happen
gave way to a better,
more sparkly generation
of men and women
men made pregnant.
Confession.
My living room is now Pinterest Perfect,
and it scares me:
faux-stone fireplace,
barn wood shelves and floors,
leather recliners,
ebay artifacts,
an eerie similarity summed up in pins
and blasted out for our consumption–
imitation is the highest form of flattery–
perfect little imperfect reflections
of some other person’s lie.
(I meant life.)
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.
13 Sunday Jan 2019
Posted in Poetry
Tags
Authenticity, Brew, Goddess, Life, Love, Poem, Poems, Poetry, Real, Strength, Truth, Witch, Woman
A good witch, I think, as her voice rises
in story: their affair, his testosterone levels,
her childhood, and its want of love,
the gratitude for her lover’s love.
She seems about six foot two,
jaw etched of marble,
arms of steel, hands of iron,
and she fills the air around us
with tremor, something ominous,
yet vulnerable, as if she is saying,
I’ll tell you my secrets, like this gift of oil.
I take it, of course, I take it,
unscrew the top of the repurposed
wine bottle, smell deeply the lavender
and the garlic, her special brew.
I will tell you how I made it, she says,
because she holds no detail back.
She is the woman you’ve heard about,
or seen in movies, the one
who doesn’t give two shits,
the one who walks into a room
and steals it, and fills it
with laughter, and warning.
The woman whose tremor speaks
and says two things: come closer,
and I will tell you of love, of loss,
of picking oneself back up,
while at the same time you hear,
if you betray me, I will kill you.
And it all seems perfectly normal,
like the moment you always knew,
now unfolding. How what’s inside of you
was already unloosed in this goddess
of olive oil brewery, truth-teller,
all eyes on her, a wild, dangerous
animal uncaged, everyone nervous,
and eager to see what she will do.
10 Thursday Jan 2019
Posted in Poetry
Tags
Cult, Fate, Ian Astbury, Life, Love, Muse, Music, Music Poems, Poem, Poems, Poetry, song, Spokane, Tambourine Man
Anointed: his one raised arm, in a throng
of arms, desperate to catch a tambourine
hucked into the body-universe by Ian Astbury,
before singing Big Neon Glitter,
Peace Dog, and Wild-Hearted Son,
and like some freak of fate
carnival game he played as a kid,
it landed like a ring on a bottle’s neck,
and throttled his arm down to his bare,
hairy, super-sweat-soaked pit.
For years, he mashed to the rhythm,
the beat, the swelling under-swell of song,
self-employed, stoned, and fully devoted,
as in, everything for the voice
that prophesized from the burning bush
of heavy metal, Shake it! Shake it!
What else could he do
except shake the damn thing
for twenty years, the entire downtown,
as kids made out, drank beer, and danced,
and someone in the crowd shouted,
Hey, everyone, the Tambourine Man is here!–
08 Tuesday Jan 2019
Posted in Poetry
Forgive me for wishing
life was more like a fairytale,
a place where once upon a time
we all struggled, our hearts
torn apart, put together again,
as we desperately journeyed
toward our happiest moments.
When we finally reached them,
and got a taste of what we knew
was out there for a few rare lucky souls,
some benevolent hand would write,
they lived happily ever after:
On my son’s twenty-ninth birthday,
He spun the big wheel at Fast Eddies,
it tink-tink-tinked past the free beer,
five dollars, and hamburgers,
to stop at the fifty dollar jackpot.
He danced with his hands in the air,
he smiled, that rare smile,
his lover kissed his cheek.
07 Monday Jan 2019
I was the best flutist in my elementary school for two and a half years–4th grade through 6th. Sadly, in the 7th grade, my reign came to an end; I was challenged, and lost, and sent packing to second chair.
At first, I thought it was because the girl who beat me was more talented–gifted–and I was deficient. But in truth, it was because I never, ever practiced–and she did.
It took me many years to understand that simple truth about those who excel and those who are left behind. Those who keep going, who keep writing, who keep practicing their instruments, who keep making foul shots or whatever it is they love doing–they’re the ones who succeed. Those who stop, don’t.
I started Bits of Poetry in 2014 to write to the poem.
Bad poem. Good poem. It didn’t matter.
I didn’t enjoy playing the flute, even though I continued playing to the 12th grade, but it wasn’t a total loss. Through it, the opening of a musical door, I learned enough to find my real love, the piano. And then, the guitar. Playing either one of them isn’t a chore, like the flute was. Playing them is a gift, and the real gift is the love of them. I knew I loved music, started an imperfect journey toward music, and found my musical soulmates.
And it’s not about playing perfectly. Far, far from it. Rather, it’s the enjoyment I get from one note, two notes, one chord, one measure. The same goes for writing. I love the written word and, eventually found my way to the poem. I love the poem. Every imperfect part of it.
If I can write towards a poem and find one good line, it feels so good. Just one line, like one solid measure of a song. Eventually, maybe two lines, and so on.
All of this is to say, in 2019 I’m re-dedicating myself to the original idea: write, write, write. It’s not about perfection, it’s about continuing on with what I love. Resist the temptation to be discouraged, but more importantly resist the temptation to be a helicopter mom to my baby poems. They will survive and grow up as long as I keep nurturing them with an open floodgate of words, honesty, observation, respect, and love.
I hope you all continue to do the same.
07 Monday Jan 2019
Posted in Poetry
Tags
Afterlife, aspen, Aspen Trees, Conversations With Maggie, Death, Death Poems, Dying, Eternity, Happiness, Heaven, Hope, Infinite, Life, Loss, Love, Maggie, Poem, Poems, Poetry, Souls, Spirit, Winter, Winter poem
Looking back, I see you
looking back, smiling,
I say your name,
as if to summon
the dead to life,
and it works,
for a moment.
It’s winter,
and the earth feels
like your absence,
the once living things,
here, but not here.
How many times
did you sit
next to me looking
out at the aspen?
And now, here it is
bare again, waving
its naked branches again.
Today, it looks like
it’s doing The Twist,
and, I think, it hears
a song I don’t, no,
a song I can’t, hear.
Looking back, I see you
looking back, smiling,
your secrets, a dance,
a song that plays
while the world listens,
and twists to a secret melody,
it cannot hear.
04 Friday Jan 2019
Posted in Poetry
Tags
Divorce, Forgiveness, Freedom, Life, Love, Memory, Poem, Poems, Poetry, Self, The Universe, Truth
“It isn’t the experience of today that drives men mad. It is the remorse for something that happened yesterday.” Bob Burdette
The tape that plays
is not always a good tape,
or an accurate replay
of what happened.
What you said,
what I said,
over thirteen years,
a million things.
No, an infinity
of words and actions
that speak louder
than words, truer
than our memories
of one another.
I told you,
when I finally leave,
it will be forever,
and I think you believed me.
If I could do over
I would do the same,
and wish you would.
No part changed.
No person gone.
No person, gone,
brought back.
Remorse? I want to say,
No. I want to say
this unplanned chaos
is part of a plan.
I want to look back,
someday, and say,
This is what I wanted,
where I wanted to be.
02 Wednesday Jan 2019
Tags
Belief, Courage, Forgiveness, Freedom, Happiness, Hope, Identity, Life, Love, Love Poems, Poem, Poems, Poetry, Self, Soul Poetry, Yearning
He said, Tell yourself who you are,
or others will make you a minor character
in a play where they are the stars.
So, I gave myself permission to be
a poet, a musician,
a good all-of-the-above:
wife, mother, sister, friend—
the many roles I inhabited,
but always felt deficient.
I have rarely known love
in the way I need love,
yet, I am surrounded with love.
Tell me, self, where have you been?
Why haven’t you defended me
against the dark thoughts?
Why haven’t you picked me up
and protected me,
held me in your arms,
and told me I am worthy
of these simple things?
28 Friday Dec 2018
Posted in Uncategorized
Tags
Afterlife, Bird Poem, Bird Poems, Birds, Conversations With Maggie, Death, Death Poems, Dreams, Freedom, God, Happiness, Heaven, Hope, Infinite, Life, Love, Maggie, Memory, Poem, Poems, Poetry, Reality, Soul, Soul Poetry, Souls, Spirit, Spirits
it was a dream, and hard to tell
where borders and countries began,
but there was a dirt path,
and only I knew the way.
The dirt was soft, and the day
beautiful, I was barefoot
and running freer than ever I have
in wakened-life. It felt good
running in a warm sunshine,
ducking under the Velvet Mesquite,
with their canopies, their shade,
their branches, like open doors
to some better, magical place.
I liked the dream very much,
and could have kept running,
but I came to a lone house,
stark in the barren desert.
A blonde girl stood outside a fence,
scared and holding a gun,
and just like that,
I was shot in the arm.
I said it was a dream, didn’t I?
So, you won’t be surprised
I was impressed with her aim,
rather than the pain of being shot,
and I had to go pee.
I looked for a bathroom,
but had to wake to find one.
What is memory, I asked
later over coffee,
a little box in our brain,
a string of pictures?
How do we get there?
Memory is what we tell ourselves,
he said, about what we see
and what we feel.
You see, when Maggie died,
she passed into a prairie falcon,
she banged against windows,
day after day after day,
then left a last gift of quail,
and traveled the road of her happiness
to some place better than here.
Months later, the sun smiled,
and I ran on dirt, soft as baby powder,
passed through door after door,
on long, liquid legs, more of wing
than bone, and only I knew—
only I knew the way.
28 Friday Dec 2018
Posted in Uncategorized
An amicable divorce is the scariest kind,
because we prefer our American ones
be macabre—on the edge of killing
without actually killing—
like, she tried to run him over,
but she also tried to miss—
and it all worked out, because
he married his lover,
she married hers,
and each say they’re happy.
Brian told me—
Sometimes, divorce is a mercy —
and just like that
the church granted his annulment.
Gibbons, wolves, french angelfish,
shingleback skinks:
monogamous for life.
Even the seahorse,
whose males carry the young,
and sandhill cranes
with their unison calls,
commit to each other
and never look back.
Yet, tell me what the seahorse
was asked to forgive:
a lie, an indiscretion,
a we don’t love each other anymore?
I literally woke and found you gone;
twenty years later,
I still don’t miss you.
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.
19 Wednesday Dec 2018
Posted in Uncategorized
Tags
Falcon, Horses, Irish Wolfhound, Jobs, Life, Poem, Poems, Poetry, Priorities, Ravens, Soul, Spirit, Work
The crippling desk, for six years,
granite topped, and bright
with the computer’s glare,
the tapping of keys,
the winding path of a mouse,
the click, click, clicking,
a sickening tick-tock of life.
Today, I say goodbye,
trade you in for a beautiful chaos,
throw myself to the world,
the raven, the falcon who tried to enter
through the upstairs window,
the horses and wolfhounds,
with their joyful lope and pounding
of the ground, the music, the words,
the gray, but wide-open sky.
19 Wednesday Dec 2018
Posted in Uncategorized
We all deserve to be loved—
and when I say loved,
I mean desperately—
the kind of love that clings to you,
that winds you together with the sheets,
that says, when we die
we want to be placed together
intertwined, like this—
that knocks on the locked door
because your lover
can’t sleep without you—
twenty years is a long time
and look what you survived
to be here—
his arms wrapped round your chest,
hands, cupping your breasts
12 Wednesday Dec 2018
Posted in Uncategorized
06 Thursday Dec 2018
Posted in Uncategorized
Tags
Equine, Foal, Herd, Horse Poem, Horse Poems, Horse poetry, Love, Poem, Poems, Poetry
The familiar sounds of mi familia,
a hu-hu-hu-hu-hu of many hellos,
and a foal’s heart-shaped muzzle
pressed through the bars,
waiting for a welcoming kiss.
There’s only one way for the heart to go,
and that is up, up,up, where the soul,
the spirit, the thing we know
that is delighted there,
has finally founds its home.
29 Thursday Nov 2018
Posted in Uncategorized
Tags
Bird Poems, Hope, Life, Poem, Poems, Poetry, politics, Soul Poetry, Truth
In a world of untrue things,
I choose to celebrate
the migration of wild geese in November,
and the stillness of this sunrise,
a quiet, broken conversation
passing through a cloud-filled sky.
09 Tuesday Oct 2018
Posted in Uncategorized
Tags
Death, Fear of Death, Horses, Life, life after death, Life and Death, Love, Peace, Perception of Time, Poem, Poems, Poetry
There is a fine line,
so skinny, so fragile;
what is,
on the other side,
breathing hard.
A horse can hear,
a deer can hear it,
but we do not,
and we live, mostly,
without fear.
Recently, the paths diverged:
what should have been,
but wasn’t,
what was,
but shouldn’t have been,
and I wonder
if those two ways,
continue in different spheres.
I hear their breathing,
each year, stronger,
and something, like love,
pulling me there.
What is time,
but a rotation under the sun,
a perception of what has been,
a perception of moving
toward what is to come.
07 Sunday Oct 2018
Posted in Uncategorized