Summer Cycle

Summer Cycle

and what of all the girls who never rode a bike
who never felt the passing wind plant kisses on their cheeks
who never got to speed down hill, flying free and birdlike

who didn’t ride through inky streets, headlight glowing – moonlike
what gave them joy on summer days, some book in ancient greek?
and what of all the girls who never rode a bike

who never slipped along a stream to watch new hatchlings, spy-like
who never pedaled all the way from home to Mozambique
then sped downhill, back home again, flying free and birdlike

what gave them shivers down their spines or made them giggle, childlike
did any comet, moon or star make them want to shriek
and what of all the girls who never rode a bike

what made them turn to face the sun, as it was setting, flowerlike
who found in books, some world of words, of wonder and mystique
but never got to speed downhill, flying free and birdlike

while I am cycling streets and lanes and gravel alleys, catlike
and jumping logs and chasing frogs along a creek
and what of girls who never rode a bike
who never got to speed downhill, flying free and birdlike

 

 

Pet Lament

Pet Lament

 

I still look for you

under the covers when I make the bed,

hiding behind the love seat,

sitting on the windowsill –

watching trains go by.

 

Did I love you enough?

Leaving you alone while I vacationed.

Did I love you too much?

Spoiling you with crunchy treats on demand.

Was I careless in my caring?

 

 

I think I hear your purr

coming from the bathtub

where you would lay on hot days –

I still leave a bowl of water

there for you. And I miss the

fine white cat fur that collected

in the corners and on my clothes.

 

Day Ten

Un(bee)lievable

Un(bee)lievable

 

I know you think I shouldn’t be able to fly

but here I am, in your garden,

buzzing around looking for flowers.

You cling to the old myth that my wings

are not large enough to lift my fuzzy body,

yet no one bothered to ask me how I managed.

I was once considered a pest, just

another summer irritant as I flew too

close to your picnics and games, and

you sprayed and swatted to make me go away.

Still, no one realized the role I played as

I went from plant to plant collecting and

depositing pollen until it was almost too late.

Now I am the darling of your garden where

you put up special boxes for me to nest in,

print me on T-shirts, paint me on cute mugs,

and marvel at my aviation skills.

 

 

Poetry of Paranoia

Poetry of Paranoia

 

This poem is not too sure of itself

It’s always looking over its shoulder

Second guessing itself

Waiting for the other shoe to drop

It sleeps with the lights on

And is always on the lookout

For black cats and sidewalk ladders

And open umbrellas indoors

It is a “chicken little” kind of poem

Expecting the sky to fall

 

Mat Reality

Mat Reality

 

yogis doing downward dog

while I lay prostate, like a log

triangles and eagle arms

I really do not feel the charm

cat and cow and plow and chair

make me think I might not care

about the mountains or the trees

or boats that never sail the seas

we twist and bend until at last

laid out like corpses, end of class

 

 

Imitation

Imitation

 

I slowly strolled through the museum

admiring the flower arrangements that

had been designed to compliment some

of the artwork. Still life, portrait, landscape,

paired with bouquets of roses and exotic

bird of paradise and common daisies.

I stood beside some peach-colored dahlias

trying to interpret the floral artist’s vision

when I heard a whisper coming from

the middle of a brass planter. “There is

no painting that can duplicate us. You should

go outside to the garden to find true beauty.”

 

 

Bird Weary

Bird Weary

 

The birds are merrily chirping

away in my backyard.

Robins are hopping around

searching for worms hiding just

under the surface of the grass.

Chickadees are picking out their

favorite seeds from the feeder,

then flying off to the chokecherry tree

to crack them open, finding the best

part hidden inside.

A small wren is singing loudly from

the top of the garden fence,

hoping to attract a mate.

And a pair of bluebirds are

busy hauling twigs and grass

into the bird box hanging on

a pole, building a nest for

the eggs to come.

Here I sit, all alone with nothing to

do, nowhere to be, no one to talk to.

Stupid birds!

 

Day Five

Sending Love

Sending Love

 

She blows kisses to a fluffy cloud

Hoping the wind will blow it

Straight to you, then squeeze it

Out to express every drop

Of love it holds upon your life