an intimate portrait

 

he saw me only in words and letters and not sounds or tastes but kept coming back just the same
when he needed to feel higher and better
he asked to sketch me and when he was done I was shocked for it was not my face I saw looking back at me
but a portrait of my most private thoughts and places
every nook, crevice, hill, texture
rendered in pencil so deftly and softly drawn
showing something raw and beautiful when I had never been beautiful
but when I looked closer I saw him looking back at me
as he saw himself
so it was never just me
but I was still beautiful because we are all mirrors to each other
and the reflection does not exactly lie
but just reflects everything backwards
so we have to look a bit differently to the familiar in others and ourselves
to find beauty and truth
whether gently drawn or roughly chiseled in stone
we are not lesser or lower than anyone to anyone for anyone
if we remember the reflection and the silhouette of the shadow in the afternoon glow
as it fades to evening as do we all
we are left with artist renderings or words and pictures
and we are beautiful and higher and better
but still words and letters will not describe
what we hear and taste but we can try
to be true

Porphyria’s Season

 

She was fine with the solstice but the equinox got her every time.

He told her she was just the same as everyone else.
She thought that was not true all the time.
Someday she’d be someone’s The One and not a stand-in For Now.

She was an expert at transition
But could not abide consistency.
She didn’t see a calm pond but saw a stagnant cesspool.

She’d sing to the songs the breeze carried
He’d try to pin her like a moth to a board
When she really wanted the flame carried on the wires.

Had she really been told she could do anything
Or was that a daydream like the others?
What a lie if true, what a story if not.

There were constraints binding her to the Now but not her mind which delved into Then and Again.

For every change she built a pattern
For every room she’d create a space
In her vision he glowed like starlight
In her ears she sang for herself alone.

He thought he knew her seasons but she surprised him just the same.

No More Blank Pages

 

When do we stop being a blank page?
so full of words, images
we are weighted down, submerged
What’s on the other side?

The unknowns become familiar
yet we are lonely, disconnected.

A child sees joy
with unwavering acceptance
joins in and plays.

Where two or more meet
there are opinions, yet
Why do we feel alone with our thoughts?

A child holds on to the good
knowing you can erase even on old crinkled paper.

“Lead me to the truth and I will follow you with my whole life. ” – Mumford & Sons

Way Off the Road

kerouacFriggin’ Kerouac. He at least drove on the road. Why oh why did I have to walk so far? When I left the house, looking for fresh air to clear my head, I thought I’d walk to the end of my lane and turn back. The sky was grey and a few flurries were starting to pick up. I stopped for at least two full minutes when I got to the end of the little dirt road. That doesn’t sound like a long time but even on a road that sees maybe six cars a day, it’s a long time to be standing still.

I didn’t want to enter Robert Frost territory; he wrote about metaphorical paths. I wanted to see if it would spark any thoughts heading in a new direction. So I kept moving forward, not looking back. Well, I did look back at least once, to make sure there weren’t any bears coming out of the woods. I’d passed some questionable tracks by the stream. Not that I would know what to do if I saw any bears.

At this point, I really wished I’d thought my little jaunt through, maybe bringing a cell phone and some tissues because my nose was running something fierce. A hat would have been nice. And my legs were showing signs of fatigue, my sedentary lifestyle taking its toll. Why didn’t I change into proper footwear? The cold wind slapped me in the face as if to say “Are you really going to waste your time in this fresh air thinking only of your discomfort? Snap out of it! Look around!”

So I did. Everything was still brown, but there were little signs of green poking through that I wouldn’t have seen driving past. On foot, I could smell the earth and hear trickles of water as the land thawed around me.

Today’s walk was spur of the moment and while I was happy to be outside after a long winter, I was cursing between heaving breaths that reminded me of when I was in labor. What awaited me at the end of this road? Whatever possessed me to take a walk on this blustery day? Did the road heave this winter or have these hills always been so steep? Why are there so many stories about travels and searching? Why does it seem the grass is greener elsewhere? Are we truly never satisfied?

So I guess I overthink things. Walking wasn’t soothing or clearing anything up for me. I kept going back to Kerouac. He had some interesting travels on his road, but he said in interviews that he lived a mostly quiet life, experiencing a lot of what he wrote about in his head.

Was that my lesson? Should I have stayed home? I don’t know that I would have dug out my copy of “On the Road” and read the underlined passages that appealed to me in college. I may not have been prompted to jot down three story ideas. I wouldn’t be rambling on about roads now with parts of a dirt road still stuck to my shoes.

On my walk, I approached the last hill that led home. My face was numb from the cold at this point, but I was about to come full circle. It made me shiver with anticipation for the warmth I knew would be awaiting me.

So maybe within a cliché I could find a lesson: appreciate what you’ve got but never stop exploring. When I was young and in a rush to experience everything, I embarked on some frantic travels. There was so much white space to fill in my mental journal. As with most people, I’ll probably be happy when I’m old to rest and let the young have at it. But I’m firmly in that weird middle, as in “middle aged” and I’m not ready to rest, but I get so tired. I’m like a child in some ways fighting bedtime. I want just one more story.

Rum and Remembrance

 

What you see is so often hard to look beyond.
The still life cannot compete with the moving pictures we create
Even when imagined, especially when real.

We hold a part of all who have touched us.
Connections from within and without, our names on marquees
Never the beautiful, often the damned
We carry laughter, miracles, dissonance.

Frequently our territory is too tame and not enough.
We search for the whys and whens and wheretofores.
Mediocrity is the spectre,
With perplexing indifference, agonizing deflection, amusing acceptance.

Laced with experience, armed with knowledge
The pen does its job, washing away the bitter
The words taste like rum.

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