Solstice before maps

An embroidered lung

rests upon fluffy four-ton clouds,

heedless of peaked protuberances.

Lasso a lumberjack cradling coffee

with hair falling like comets;

ignore the missing green corduroy

and always remember

the red vest with special patterned trim.

Voyages meant something when we had

no maps or agendas.

We were never sailors but

we knew how to lick lollipops

and celebrate solstice like children amok.

Mother and child

Rita’s mom knitted

in her dim and quiet den

while Rita refilled coffee cups

in the diner on 12th.

Both women daydreamed

about snuggling days long past,

when the whole world

(all that mattered) was held

in an orangey greenish quilt

that smelled of menthol cigarettes.

Rita smiled through smoke and hash browns

and 37 cent tips, remembering

stories her mom told her

of birds carrying souls to heaven

and how lost feathers meant second chances.

Her mom didn’t stray much from her sofa

with the faded quilt

or her songs of spring breezes rolling

over green hills of some long forgotten fantasy;

she was hoping her daughter still had visions

beyond gravy and chipped formica.

A colorful taunt from the rear-view mirror

The brutal rainbow reminded me

I cannot hold beautiful things

for posterity because good things

are fleeting, keeping us chasing them

until we stumble off the earth.

That’s living at best, suffering at worst,

and all the fancy pilings of touch in between.

Make peace with a swirling sky

Holding tightly to a vague memory

of a make-believe mountain

drenched in quiet color.

Angels plant images like these

to sinners who repent in sleep

so they don’t drown in groggy sobs.

.

Bone and stone, star and sight

all carry the same oath, a blessing

when released on northern lights

and let go over dark seas.

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