ON THE WAY OF HEALING

The healing
can come with contraction
or maybe expansion,

yielding
perhaps relief
perhaps dread,
perhaps a mounting of tension.

What is left,
and how much,
when the journey of a thousand miles
has begun,
foot after foot,


here, stone–
there, thorny thicket–
there, unseen tree root–

come sun,
come wind,
come rain, sleet, hail or snow,
in torrents or sprinkles,
simple
or with thunder and lightning aglow–


I truly don’t know.

Shall I turn back?


Will I or no,
for better or for worse,
there’s really no way
to do that–

I simply cannot get back
to the exact
place where I once was–
the impression that that could be possible
for me or for anybody,
is nothing more than a tempting mirage. . .

But I could take a break,
at any old time,
but especially if I fall
or I fear I may fall,

to gather the best of myself
this moment has to offer,
and, after a spell,
and choose the right time,
anew to venture out forth,

at such a time as things
look less apt
to go south. . .

but whither else they will go,
and by which route,
I must keep on
discerning,
each bit along my way,

to which end,
I must again and again
tell myself,

I will have to do my very best
always to keep both an eye
and an ear out.

To discover which way I need
and which way needs me,
based on the preponderance
of the available evidence,

even if the case
cannot be proved
to being beyond
a reasonable doubt.

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BEAUTY DEEP AND FLEETING

There is a deep and fleeting beauty

to this and every day,

by wee star hours

through rising dawn

and morning sun,

up till high or low-slung noon,

depending on the season,

and then, afterwards,

when the sun arcs back down

and eventually

sinks past horizon,

through three parts dusk,

quite oft with bright colored stripes,

then into night,

when stars wink in

and often moon swings up

in one of sundry shapes again.

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WHAT I SEE NOW AND IN THE TIME TO COME

A New Year ushered in.
Gray and bright,
still wet with rain,
and rearranged
with puffs of wind.

Some trees laid bare,
while some plants
here and there
are dressed
in springy flower.

And days begin to stretch,
if only just a little bit,

and shift the workings of the stars,
from those far away,
to the wandering, closer planets,
circling around the same star,
which is ours.

All this makes me dare to think,
there’s much that still lays yet ahead
that can yet be
toward the better steered
by my small one life’s power.

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A LOT OF THINGS LIFE IS TRYING TO TEACH ME

There’s a lot of things life is trying to teach me —

sometimes I wish it weren’t so hard to learn them.

Sometimes, I manage to be glad for the ones

I’ve already learned,

as well as the ones I’m learning,

whether they be a walk in the park

or

torturous,

or anywhere in between.

Bumps or curves in the road,

special twists on what I expect–

all in a day’s work to respond to–

READY OR NOT!!

Life, give me all you’ve got!

An interesting mix

is bubbling in this pot.

= = = = = = =

Note: I wrote this in 2011, came across it today, and am posting now.

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STOPPING BY SANDCASTLE ON A LATE SUMMER DAY

Stopping by sandcastle

on a late summer’s day–

neat towers

firm-packed with pails

and decked with tiny shells

a seagrass-filled ditch

denoting moat,

a constructed citadel

methinks

by little lasses

swimsuits, blond tresses

who sit with their adults

upshore several paces,

giving us some sideways blinks,

before we’re shortly off again

on our barefooted, sandy way.

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A NOTE OF SUN, A NOTE OF GRAY

I.

Quite a nice thing to note
how wonderful it can be
to live
on an ordinary sunny morning.


II.

And when a cloak of gray
bedecks the sky
there is a pleasant softness
to my contemplative
morning eye,

A respite from sharp bright and heat,
that, on this once-in-a-lifetime
though seeming ordinary
late summer day,
cannot be beat.

~ ~ ~ ~ ~

(Part I, I wrote August 23, 2011,
and Part II, I wrote today, August 23, 2025, as a response)

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THE PERFECT GEM I CANNOT FULL SEE INTO

The perfect gem
of a sunny summer’s day–

bright outside–warm exposed,
but with
a little breeze afoot
to gently kiss my toes. . .

shade intermit out there,
under trees
ready there,
if I should choose it
for me,

or,
further, if further respite I require,
to cool my thorny twists of thought
which can feel as searing and as smoky
as wildfire,

I can, when it seems time, retreat inside
to rest a bit and heal,
and/or
eventually go back to move
and take me forth
at what intervals I cannot wholly well predict,

and by means of paths and at a pace
as yet are by no means
known, clear nor pronounced,
as on my face,
the nose,

and though I don’t,
I tend to want to think
at least God knows.

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THIS SUMMER’S DAY

This summer’s day
is sweet, soft and warm.

I am tempted to tell,
to fool
myself
that it will last,
and will not prove ephermeral,

and that
never again will I see
nor feel
a wind-whipping,
havoc- and chaos-wreaking storm.

And,
whether
that is unusual or not,
I cannot say.

Perhaps, at least for me, it’s not. . .

In any case,

there still is
work to do,

and joy and pleasure to be had,

and pauses to take
to tease out best
the way toward all of this,

for, though the day be kind of ordinary,

no one can say
whether what right now and here
is at least fleetingly available
will ever even once
show up hence, again,
to let us maybe seize it then,
whether it be the experience
of challenge or achievement
pain or difficulty
or a pleasing interlude of
something perhaps rarer yet,

which,
if only for
an eye blink’s length
could possibly be experienced
as genuine
or else,
as well-constructed facsimile of bliss.

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FROM CANYON’S BOTTOM, OPPORTUNITIES FOR CLIMBING

Living at a canyon’s bottom
leaves many openings for climbing. . .

Yet,
some days, when rushing torrents’
wind-whipped water flows,
life can feel boxed in and slippery, treacherous,
though all the movement leaves not enough pause
for things to fester and become rotten.

Or can it yet develop, worsen,
or decay, in such a way
that the onslaught erodes
the integrity of
roots and rocks
at earth’s lowest point,
whence one might have cause to think
some firm ground on which to stand,
if sought sufficient deep,
would surely somewhere manifest,
in some firmer-packed dip in mud or dirt
or on some drier, sandy or gravely mound. . .

In part, I guess,
it depends whether
you can see patterns
in the onslaught and ensuing mess,
to help you spot that firmer ground,
which looks a little easier to tread,
upon which you, tentative,
can start to step, and try to climb,
until, at least some greater modicum
of warmer daylight will come around,

and perhaps some solid bush or tree or stone
to shield a bit against the rain and wind,
and when things, at last, do calm some more,
a chance to climb up
to the rim,

where perhaps a bit of sunshine,
and free access to the wider world be found,

and deeper inner surety and outer confidence
can boom softly out,
and radiate
both down to the canyon’s base
and up to arch of sky
and every circular which other way,

where that life-affirming and benevolent expression
will all corners find
where they doubtless
loud and clear and widely shall resound.

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TODAY, I ASK MYSELF

Today.
I ask myself
what I could do
that would, to me,
be the most helpful?

And if, possible,
along a path
that will not be
absolutely hell-ful?

Maybe it is
or maybe is not
that looming monolith
that seems most obvious,
obstructive,
and most treacherous.

If so,
how might I move it,
love it,
make peace with it,
coming to some sort of precipice,
wherefrom,
if I were to jump,
the landing
would not be
a violent and injurious thing,
but rather,
a strong and gentle,
cat-like,
well-tolerated landing.

If not,

or if it fails
to yield
or grow soft to my love,

perhaps there is
another path
where that monolith
just is not relevant,

where, if I
can hush
and hear
the deepest beating of my heart,

I can find,
and boldly,
and with confidence,

begin to walk
not even having had
to make a guess of it.

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