Tuesday, October 5, 2021

Zoom

 Zoom Zoom Zoom… running on the technology highway 

Email and text may soon be outdated 

To computers and iPhones we are now mated 

Snapchat and facetime may be fast, facebook will be a thing of the past 


Zoom Zoom Zoom…running on the technology highway 

To know what’s new just google this, google that

Find old friends and write notes in the chat

No more books; just read on-line; worry not, your eyes will be fine


Zoom Zoom Zoom… running on the technology highway 

Meetings in isolation, but you’re not alone 

Connect with co-workers, working from home 

Learn about COVID, get all the stats and know all the facts 


Zoom Zoom Zoom… running on the technology highway 

Order all your groceries and other supplies 

Fix your virtual background to “travel” world-wide 

Get a spot while they last; view a webinar, take a class


Zoom Zoom Zoom…running on the technology highway 

Attend a church service with music complete 

File your taxes and keep things neat 

Share ideas in a break-out group, please remember to unmute


Zoom Zoom Zoom… running on the technology highway 

Oh the wonders of what we now can do 

And for the children this is normal too 

Sign up for a test, sign up for a shot 

LIFE NOW ON ZOOM 

Like it or NOT

Zoooom………


© Anne Cressin, 2021


Below: Ruben Gallego on Zoom meeting with

constituents from Glendale AZ

Image from Wikimedia Commons




Monday, August 30, 2021

Having Coffee with God

 In a place 

From a far past 


A backyard suspended


In the air, from a hill


In El Cajón, California


A pool and tiles around


All that this place is about


I sit on the edge of the void


Between the pool behind 


And nothingness ahead 


Right between us


The two of You and me


A little mug of espresso


Sits very little but strong


On the smooth blue green tiles


Me and this teeny little cup


Brings a memory back


Of a sunflower standing tall


And a tiny ant walking low


The proud and the humble 


In the delicious aroma of humility 


My heart is awake  


With love and passion


My mind crystal clear 


With spiritual bewilderment


You whisper gently to me


I am The Source of everything


Then you affectionately show me


Below, four vultures riding the air


Turkey birds circling the void


Around and counterclockwise 


Four beautiful words


No God but God


La ilaha illa Llah


From the beginning to the end


All evolves around My God


On the edge of everythingness


One sip after another


One word after another


So much to share 


So much to catch up on


My favorite thing in the world


Having coffee with You


A spiritual romantic moment


Taken in with gratitude 


Put around my finger 


As a priceless extinct diamond 


This edge of Divine enlightenment. 


© Imane Lemnii, 2021


A kettle of turkey vultures circling.
Photo by Jessie Eastland
from Wikimedia Commons


Monday, July 26, 2021

A practical list of the thing I have not, will not, or cannot fix

the chisel gap wedged between my front teeth my left windshield wiper, my screen protector, my screen, the four tiles beneath my sink: heinrich, stooley, waldorf, and moe, the second and third light bulbs, my thrift store painting, my bungee cord, my longsword’s crossguard, my dice bag, my website, my tax relief, my scalp and the scalp after, my didgeridoo, my mayan souvenir, my providence, my blender, my tomahawk head, the USB port, my deep noon, my bird voice, my lanyard noose, the first belt loop, my threaded spool, my dry vocal cords, my nose, my right loath sclera, my locking thumb, my hoax, my courageous double, my afterthought, my mouse colonies, my mice, the lamp whose shatter hangs cordial like half-lit guillotine, my dues, my don’ts, my do not disturbs, my disturbances, my ice-maker, my speaking terms, my formal terms of surrender, my colon, my first stain, my singularity, my sortie, that sudden stoppage of null, my old ways, my weight, my front right burner, my bad day, my time sink, my grant proposal, dinner (C) James Cole, 2021

Wednesday, March 24, 2021

Under a Mopane Tree in the Heat of the Day

A lioness stretches out long, eyes closed, still 

but for the in and out of breathing.  Four flawless

cubs sprawl over her belly, press into her breasts. 

They nurse and knead with baby paws.  She turns 

her body, raises one tawny leg, and the cubs 

topple, mew like miniature bells, scramble, 

search, reconnect – joined-again magnets.  

 

We sit silent on the savanna.  Our unmoving 

roofless vehicle six yards from this august 

animal, predatory carnivore, mother of 

nurslings.   In this moment I sense the kinship – 

a summoned tingle deep in my breast, soft buzz 

echo in the belly that announced the flow of milk.  

She knows that too – nuzzling mouths latched on, 

sucking with fury, and that fleeting serenity, 

mine too.  Her ears are never stopped. 

She hears stalks of grass, their snapping. 


© Martha E. Snell, 2021 

Lioness with cubs, Ngorongoro Crater, The Serengeti
Photo by Tony Young
from Wikimedia Commons


Monday, March 8, 2021

On the Move

Bursts of hail and heavy downpours,

resolute, gray, and dismal rain.

Shaggy pine trees overshadow guard rails.

I stumble on the road to nowhere

jammed with angry, hungry folks

seeking shelter from sheer boredom,

humming uplifting folk songs,

shoplifting a bit of happiness 

from the shelves of the rural stores.


Silver lettering reads LOVE

on the roof of a tumbledown house.

My world trembles around me,

I page through the fluffy ball of memories,

I invested too much in the writing to stop now.

Lonely and forsaken, 

I move from the floor to the sofa

swallowing salted sorrow,

typing the phone number,

a collection of digits.

It’s assigned a new area code since I lived there,

but those seven numbers, 

they are still the same,

exactly the same.

Such pain every time

to touch the buttons, 

listen to a pregnant pause,

hit the nail in the coffin of love,

destroying the sandcastle 

populated with crocodiles and cactuses

with the authority of a weathered writer.

Hitting the nail on my head,

deleting the dead seven numbers.


© Helen Kanevsky, 2018


AT&T Push-button telephone
from Wikipedia



Monday, February 22, 2021

Goodbye to 2020

Goodbye to 2020


Prologue:

We live our lives in a spiral

That begins and ends in a year

And still we exclaim, “Is it always the same?

Will a FUTURE ever appear?”

(Will a true future ever appear?)


**A**

Goodbye to a year that was frozen

In habits forever engrained

With the tyrants enclosed in their stock market castles

With silk-puckered gowns & brocade


While the hospitals fill

With the fevered

While their families look on in vain

As their loved ones lie dying

In fierce isolation 

Unheard and untouched and unnamed


**B** [Chorus]

Goodbye to the children in cages

Mad rulers who bluster and rage

Hello to the unions of lovers and leapers

The she’s and the he’s and they’s


And we’ll be singing

A new beginning

And we’ll be living

The earth’s own song


We’ll be her friend

Not her extractors

Be her servants

Seeking to mend


**C**

There’s a school that surrounded by gardens

A prairie and two thousand trees

That they planted themselves in the dirt that they’ve held

Like the frogs that slip into the stream

And they’ll watch it unfold as they come to know

What it means to be humble and green

What it means to be humble and green

            **D**

Goodbye to the murder of black men

As they stand or they walk or they speak

The knee on the neck, the shots in the back

No questions, no pause, no relief

No questions, no pause, no release


Hello to the wonder of

Knowing each other

Our music, our histories revealed

Our voices and yearnings

Our failures and turnings

Give us grace to recover ourselves

Give us grace to discover ourselves


-[Repeat B - Chorus]-


**E**

And thus we’ll envision

We’ll sit up and listen

To the facts we’ve evaded so long

Goodbye to the blindness

Hello to the kindness

We’ve left buried deep

We’ve forgotten to speak

With our hearts and our quivering tongues

With our hearts and our opening tongues


**F**

At the edge of the sky there’s a window

Where the faces of others arise

Through the mist of a jungle

The breath of a tunnel

And a village still rich and alive


The children leap into the river

They lift up their faces and shiver

Haul sunfish in hands for their dinner

And laugh the world back with their eyes

And laugh the world back with their lives

**

Epilogue:

We live our lives in a spiral

That begins and ends in a year

And still we exclaim, “Is it always the same?

Will a FUTURE ever appear?”

(Will a true future ever appear?)


© Terry Hermsen, 2021


To listen to the song performed, click on the orange link immediately below:                              

YouTube link:   Goodbye to 2020 ~ Performed by Bill Walker


Photo from the "On the Road to Happiness" website
home page






Sunday, February 21, 2021

Roses to the Poets

Roses to the poets who might have been, but for …


the paralysis of pain

the security of consent

the ease of silence


Roses for the stillborn words


© William Vollrath, 2020 

"Gladioli and Roses"
by Henri Fantin-Latour (1836-1904)
Guildhall Art Gallery
from Wikimedia Commons

Tuesday, February 9, 2021

I did not know / old childhood friend

I did not know 

I had a child to protect

I did not know 

she was used to neglect 

I did not know 

how to feed her 

what she liked to wear

how to hold or care 

for her skin and hair 

I did not know 

how to protect her 

because I did not have 

the strength to fail

until one cold and stormy evening

I heard a ring

and there at my door step 

was a wet 

familiar little girl 

yellow blanket and grey bear 

in her tiny hand 

a warm forgiving look 

in her hazel eyes 

it was then I realized 

that I did not recognize 

her needs as mine 

I had refused to listen 

to her inherent wisdom 

for years 

I could no longer hear 

her pleading for my presence:

my protection 

but then

last december

in the pouring rain 

there she was 

open arms

no raincoat on

welcoming my grief 

like an old childhood friend 

where she asked again 

and this time 

I listened

and instantly 

without judgement 

she offered the kind 

of kindness loss needs: 

a hand to hold

an eternal

internal hug 

standing in the rain

crying like the rain 

around us 

she showed me 

how to take off my armor: 

the denial I wore 

since before 

I can remember 

I told her 

“it hurts, this letting go. 

I do not know 

my life without it.”

she said “it was never yours 

in the first place.”

and once free from its weight

she said softly 

“sometimes holding heaviness 

is a way of trying to forget.”

like I said

I did not know

I had a child to protect 

I did not know 

that this abandoned child 

standing in the rain

was me


© Jona Noelle Baily, 2021


Photo by Zurna Creative on Unsplash 

Tuesday, January 26, 2021

A True Story

Childhood epiphany:

how a magnifying glass

angled toward the sun

smokes a hole in a dry leaf.


I showed Caren – for

the sake of epiphany –

she needed one, or

two, or three – Caren


was the grade school terror.

She came to grief

at recess behind the trailer

(a shuttered mystery),


squatting in dead sedge grass,

with a fascinated enlistee,

lasering a leaf, utterly

enraptured.  Flame, even!


© Monica Adams, 2021



Photo from Outdoor Life
https://www.outdoorlife.com/how-to-easily-start-an-optical-fire-with-these-three-tricks/



Monday, January 18, 2021

Send-Off

Your old mutt snorts and sniffs, leans

his red hide against my solidness, 

knows the smell of motor oil, Old Spice, and cigarettes has gone. 

Relaxes into the silence of your missing stride beside him,

as I carry the gritty sand of you in a rusty cookie tin. 


Amen, I say and spread you

over the ancient, ornery land you loved. 

Our November Valley wind attends your send off, 

gently lifts you from the granite ground.


Like fog or snow or horses’ breath

you linger In the air;

the seen and unseen, 

the here and there, 

the living and dead

quarrel like siblings 

slinging halfhearted punches. 


The crows you named and tried to catch

honor your changing form, 

eulogize your soul beyond the sentinel hills, 

laugh at the late fall gusts that carry you


carry you


© Michelle Stoll, 2021 


Image from Wikimedia Commons