Poetry

Poetry

A Long Week

It is the first day of spring
and snow is falling.
It’s Friday evening
and I’m too tired to care.

Friends have braved the slippery roads
and headed to the local joint
When I was young
I longed to run with the crowd
on a Friday Night.

Instead, I am home,
with things to read
and things to write
and chores to do.

I close my eyes
and try to gather strength.
I yawn
and think about bed.

Most of the chores,
the reading
and writing
can wait til tomorrow.

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Falling

My fortune cookie said
success is getting up
one more time
than you fall down.

Though there are times
when you just don’t want
to get back up.

Especially when facing
a blank page
and a commitment to write.

It sounds a bit
like Sisyphus’ fortune.

It seems to go
hand in hand
with,
“If you don’t fall down,
you’re not trying hard enough.”

And then, there’s learning to fall.
I remember learning to fall
as part of the exercises
for a fight scene
in a play
in college.

Later, a friend with Lou Gerhig’s disease
sang about learning to fall,
and perhaps that sums it all up.
We’re all just learning to fall.

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St. Patrick's Day 2015

I never was particularly aware of being Irish growing up.
I didn’t know the origin of my last name
It didn’t start with a Mc or an O.

There weren’t any signs of Irish culture around the house,
at least that I knew of.

Probably the closest we ever got
was when my father would whistle
“I’ll Take You Home Again Kathleen”
when he was driving the car somewhere.

Years later, I found that several generations back
a young Irishman married
a proper Boston Brahmin.

I’ve never learned the full story
though I suspect that his in-laws love their grandchildren
but didn’t tolerate anything else Irish.

As much as I wonder about John and Lucy
I am also curious about Kathleen from the song.

What was the home she longed for and did it really exist
or was it simply another idealized memory?

It‘s a familiar refrain.
In another song, a farmer talks
about taking his wife back east
for Christmas,
if the harvest’s any good.

But the harvest rarely is
as good as we hope
and even if we do make it back east,
we find things have changed.

I think of Tarkovsky and Nostalghia
of Woolfe’s Angel, looking homeward
but not being able to go back,
and I sit, writing,
knowing I can’t go home again, either.

My mother’s dead,
my father’s in assisted living,
and my childhood home
is now owned by strangers.

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Background Noise

The sound of a distant jet buzzes in the background.
In the family room, the dialog from a television
takes on a common rhythm.

The sleeping dog shifts and snorts
my daughter, wearing her headphones
blurts out so brief random sound
in response to whatever she is listening to.

As I record my observations
I can hear the sound of the keys
on the laptop being depressed.

As I seek for writing material,
I scan Facebook and the evening news;
a scandal in Washington,
conflict internationally,
and gossip about celebrities.

All of this is background noise
as I sit in my chair
searching
for absolutes.

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The Weather Map

As a child I would watch the weather report
on the evening news
when my parents weren’t around.

I’d copy the weather map,
the fronts, the low pressure areas
so we would know
when to expect rain.

How will the crops grow?
When will there be good drying weather?
Will there be school tomorrow?

These were the concerns of my childhood.

Years later, I lived in a city
and the weather seemed much more remote,
like wind, fog or snow
in poems from yesteryear.

It would be what it would be,
until I moved on a boat
and the storms and tides
became much more immediate.

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