love notes
a ritual to start the work week
Dream a little. Dream
a lot for lots are not what they seem. Dream
eyes wide open to see what you could be. Dream
eyelashes into butterflies and dream
oceans into puddles. Dream
tears into sutures and dream
laughter into tourniquets, let them
stitch you up and keep you alive
when the world blows through you
and tears at your seams. Dream
movement into muscle. Dream
plans into performance. Dream
maybes into momentum and ever-building steam. Dream
moment after moment til they slow into lava flows. Dream
time into a forest and get lost among the trees. Dream
love into a meadow and meet the blossoms like bees. Dream
the petals. Dream
the pollen. Dream
the nectar into honey and honey into hive into home into hope
that your dreams keep us alive
a little longer to dream
one more time.
love notes
a ritual to start the week
Looming trunks and scrubby brush rush
by, a forest on its feet, marching. Arms
taken up into tangled branches wave
in the wind. Muddy bare feet grip
slippery flat stones tilting into brook’s edge
and cloud its cool, clear water. Woods ablaze
with action around us, we wait, shrieving
our soles of their tresspasses before
joining the trees in their crusade.
love notes
a ritual to start the week
wood grain faces stare
silently at our bustle
river stones worn smooth
dunes shift under foot
harsh rasps swirl against floor boards
removing layers
a fire melting
angry sand into soft glass
the way you touch me
love notes
a ritual to start the week
Raindrops fall like sand
in an hourglass, counting
down the moments ’til
the skies clear again.
Down here, our soles
stick as muck flicks
up our calves, splashed
with an unavoidable filth.
Up above some unseen
ceiling, though, the load
lightens, invisible. The light
must break sometime: wait.
love notes
a ritual to start the week
Buds poke heavy heads through
rough earth, peer through gaps
in their gentle wrappings like
children around corners or
behind sofas, between fingers.
They waited — obvious mounds
under blankets, feet under curtains,
barely hidden in familiar spots —
gleeful to be sought. Now found,
their laughter blooms sunny yellow.
love notes
a ritual to start the week
Forgive us, mother, for we have waited,
watched and wanted something more or
something else, but unsure and afraid of
knowing how bodies crumple, how
fissures form, we recoiled from the fire,
stopped our reach and stunted growth. Now
dear mother, please bestow us strength enough
to stand before the swirling maw.
love notes
a ritual to start the week
What if it’s a gift — that missing
piece, the one you can’t move
forward without; that reminder
that slipped your mind; that post-it
that came unstuck and slipped
behind your desk; that message
that spooled and spooled and
didn’t send; that missing link
between the day you thought
you’d have and the day you’re
having? Or at least, what if
you chose to see it that way?
love notes
a ritual to start the week
Some days the words don’t come.
You rummage through the junk
drawer of your brain and only
pull out old corks and little bits
of string, a faded rubber band
one use from snapping and leaving
your thumb stinging, a dull pencil
with the long forgotten name of a
failed town council candidate and
a rock hard eraser. Some days the
connections don’t click, a random
hand of cards that don’t match. But
some days you pick up a pair, nines
that were always meant to meet, a
diamond and a heart. Some days
beauty pops like sweet tart
sparkling wine and strings together
like plump carnation heads, holds
fast like fingers around a bouquet
or a wrist or ring. Some days soften
us and etch themselves into our
memories, never to be erased.
love notes
a ritual to start the week
Today, my horoscope told me
to do bad poetry, but I’m afraid
I don’t know how. I know how
to do bad penmanship. And bad
focus comes as naturally to me as
bad dreams. But bad poetry feels
like an impossibility, like bad
tacos or birthday wishes or laughter
or love. Once written, once shared,
it only exists in gradations of good.
So I guess the only bad poetry
I’ve ever composed are the lines
I’ve kept inside. And yes, I guess
I do know how and maybe it also
comes quite naturally and maybe
I did it yesterday and will again
tomorrow, but no, not today.
love notes
a ritual to start the week
step one: step
step two: step step
step three: repeat
step four: more more
step five: leave doubt behind
step six: no fibs no tricks
step seven: just keep stepping
step eight: you’ve come so far
step nine: just one step left
step ten: step again
love notes
a ritual to start the week