Headstrong is a little white calf,
If I gave her a name, it would end in “-ita”
And it would mean something like “too big for her britches.”
The vet is here, and she doesn’t know what’s good for her.
The others, docile. She’s a fighter
On a concrete stage.
“Take me on, boys,”
She seems to say.
Three of them, pulling on her rope.
She whips her strong head this way and that,
Popping sweat from their arms.
But they hold on.
Headstrong is a little white calf,
Giving their money a run;
Stubborn is a Caribbean cowboy,
Born under a mountain sun.
Month: May 2019
The Day You Forget
UncategorizedThe day you forget what it’s like to be a child is the day the leaves drop from the old maple, and all you see is the work piling up in the driveway.
It’s the day you don’t notice the flyaway bubbles that squirt out of the dish soap. You don’t smile at the plucky little escapees because all you see is the stack of dishes and too little time.
It’s the day you lose your patience with the sluggish driver ahead of you instead of making up a story about why she’s going 25 in a 40.
Just because there’s no one to give you time out doesn’t mean you shouldn’t take it.
Time outdoors.
Time out of the helter-skelter.
Time out of your habits. Out of your routine thoughts.
Time out of this world.
Time to imagine, to rediscover.
To remember.
To wonder.
Word-Wrangler’s Delight
Poetry, Word-wranglingBright like sun on the water sparkles, glancing off silver and gold.
Words fitly spoken.
Found and written. Fashioned and fitted. Hold them when you find them. Beams of wit and wisdom bouncing off the waves.
Trace them bright in slender black on paper white, when you find them… Treasure, you know it.
The Accordion Woman
Poetry, TravelGlasgow is crying.
I watch the accordion woman
fold up her instrument,
scrape up a few coins,
and pull close her proud little jacket–
tidy and beige.
Glasgow is crying.
She marches up the street
feeling the years in her limbs.
I watch the scarf,
tidy and black
and bent into the rain,
plodding home–
to a snug little flat, I hope–
tidy and warm.
She has a cat, I decide–
beige.
He purrs like an accordion.
Maybe I’ll ask her, tomorrow,
if she has a cat.
The Word-Wrangler
Word-wranglingIf you’ve seen her writing fervently in a little notebook in the strangest of places wearing a satisfied grin of concentration–you’ll know it from the slight furrow of her brow–you might think it’s easy.
Word-wrangling.
You’ve seen inspiration so good she puts a pause on running errands and sits in her car scribbling. She’s capturing the bits of lyrics and dialogue and perfect phrases that float in on the breeze. And it looks like it. A breeze.
Sometimes.
But sometimes she has to lasso the wind. The words won’t come, and when they do, they feel grey and tarnished, heavy as lead, and just as dull. So she wrestles and ropes and gets those windmills turning.
Sometimes the wind’s blowing up a storm. Lightning strikes so fast her pen can’t keep up. One too good to lose is about to get away. So she saddles up a pony and goes scrambling after words scattered by a gust. Sometimes she doesn’t make it in time.
This is the life of a word-wrangler. Going headlong after the just the right turn of phrase–words wild and beautiful, running free across the mind, kicking up sparkling dust. Hiding in the canyons. Taunting the wind. They’re out there. She knows it.
Chase ’em down. Lasso ’em. Line ’em up.
I don’t know about easy. But you’d better bet it’s buckets of fun.
Here’s to all the word-wranglers. I know your aches and pains. I know your joy. I know some days it’s hard to stay in the saddle. I know you’ll be glad you did.
If you know a word-wrangler, pass it on, will ya?
Empire: sweet melancholy, wistful glad.
Music, PonderingsThere’s a hello in this goodbye. Or is it the other way ’round?
Hope, love, and sorrow tangled up in a knot of words.
Happy songs sung sad do something special. So do sad songs sung happy.
Words and music pulling the perfect tension.
Some progress from sad to happy; others from happy to sad; some go there and back again.
Then there’s the songs where lyrics and sounds skate back and forth.
Between sweet melancholy and wistful glad.
Tears and triumph.
Happy or sad, this one? I can’t tell.
What’s the mood?
What’s the secret?
Maybe it sounds different on different days.
Maybe it’s both.
“Empire,” by Philip Dunne.
Have a listen. What do you hear?
Snapshot: Washing A Horse Named Caesar
Outdoors, SnapshotsShplatt! A shower waterfalls down, tumbling off graceful muscle, velvet-smooth and a little dusty, twelve inches higher than my nine-year-old head. Good thing for long arms.