Keeping Busy

Inspired by What do you see #335

music, writing, crafts
the arts give us sanity
life, a to-do list

Preferred Outcomes

youth contemplating
a battle of right and wrong
they want to choose peace

Suzette Bishop

Wedding Ring

The ring won’t come off,
stuck
around my finger for a year,
tarnishing.

The emergency room attendants grasp
ring cutters,
two large, young men
delicately snap
the gold band,
placing the two halves
of an opened circle
in my palm.

The jeweler melds
the ring together.
You can hardly see the cracks,
all the tarnish polished off,
the red impression around
my finger nearly gone.

Veneration

I
A new church where I haven’t been to confession, 
still, the priest knows my sins,
yelling at me to come up and take communion,
wafer stuck in my throat, 
like smoke,
and nothing else.

II
The usher doesn’t need to speak,
flames in his eyes and gestures,
waving me forward to venerate the cross,
again, standing frozen,
not wanting a cold icon,
icy metal body, against my lips.

III
Windowless church basement service
for divorced families,
no communion.
The tight hairband of the veil,
guazy dress,
float away.

The Wrong Church

I was there
in a Protestant church,
my sister in a white hat,

my mother disappointed it wasn’t a veil,
too shy to dance with my new brother-in-law,
afraid to go over to my grandparents’ table,

enemies to my mother after my parents’ divorce.
Shaking, I sign,
witnessing that invalid marriage,

second vows with her second husband
allowed once I slide the paper,
thin as a wafer, to the priest.

A long-distance chilliness follows
about missing my nephew’s December
wedding in the church

decked out in Christmas
poinsettias, sparkle, evergreen, mink coats.
Our cathedral window arches moon’s cloud, 

a filmy eclipsing.

Things That Are Red

my grandfather’s hair
my nephew’s truck and hair
my mother’s lipstick
my father’s misshapen plaid sweater
my sister’s vacuum cleaner, a Red Devil
my husband’s coke can
my other nephew’s choir gown
my mother-in-law’s roses
my grandmother’s eyes
my brother-in-law’s tonsils
the abalone my father-in-law gave me before he died
the blood tying us together

~~~

Suzette Bishop has published three poetry books and two chapbooks, including her most recent chapbook, Jaguar’s Book of the Dead. Her upcoming chapbook, Unbecoming, is forthcoming. Her writing has appeared in many literary magazines and anthologies and won or been a finalist in several contests. She lives in Laredo, Texas. This is Suzette’s first feature with The Short of It.

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If you’d like to be featured on The Short of It in the future,
click here for the submission guidelines.

#TheShortofItVol 1 The Sound of Brilliance, Vol 2 Reflections & Revelations,
and Vol 3 Natures Discovered, all on Amazon

Ed Ahern

Richie

Diseases clambered onto injuries onto genetics.
The recovery waves receding a little each time
until the swells of ailments brought him aground.
In time those close gathered to remember him,
not as much for his many achievements,
as for where he had nestled in their lives.

During the teary, half-smiling sharings,
and during his gently reflective observance,
his image was sharpened and brightened
with memories of love, affection, and wit
that the living will continue to hold close.

The Gathering

In time, all that is gathered in is lost.
Persons beloved, enjoyed, or tolerated
move or fade or die away.
Beliefs defended with vehemence 
dry rot into irrelevance.
Things ostentatious and idiosyncratic
outlast posturings and purposes
but toward the end are disposed of.
In time, there is only memory of gathering.

Blissful Squalor

It was, I think, in Holland that I first noticed
picture windows showing lit-up living rooms
without curtains or concealment, displaying
staged presentations of ordered domestic bliss.
But I was raised in shrouded concealment,
with the incoming light bound and blinkered
so only birds could peek inside and see
the relative dishevelment of my existence.
A hermetic messiness usually only sorted
when others were allowed inside the curtains.

The Grip

His fingers were always half cupped
the nails dirty, horny, and split,
the knuckles over large and gnarled.
He perched his hands in his lap,
as if lifting them was a chore.
Those hands were the sigil of his life,
abused by weather and rough work.

But then he stood up in the boat,
picked up his fly rod and cast,
line undulating like a dancer,
his callused palm and fingers
caressing the weathered cork,
and I understood that this 
at least was still his to enjoy,
hands whole enough for grace.

In My Image

There are perhaps a dozen men
with whom I share unspoken bond,
our foibles snugging up so tight
that we can laugh in unison
at one another’s feeble try
at status-seeking posturing
and smile together when we fail
to gild an image thick with rust.

Hateful Comfort

There is perverse placidity
in our turmoil and tension.
No need to struggle to discern
shades of meaning and intent.
Just simply categorize and 
then also ostracize by label.
Hate is akin to lust in that
the emotions are compulsive,
engorging, and uncomplicated.

Trestles

It is the quiet ones who are most sturdy
not the flicker-changing charismatics
not bargainers who give themselves away
not the opinionated who suffer wrong
not the flabby-minded who only consume
it is those who wear themselves in silence
that are the rarely noted support beams.

Patches of Snow

Snow in early spring lingers in scabby patches
on the blacks and browns of streets and lawns,
the last overstaying guests to leave a party,
disheveled, and stained with the crusts and spills
of an innately sloppy season.

~~~

Ed Ahern resumed writing after forty-odd years in foreign intelligence and international sales. He’s had over 550 stories and poems published so far, and twelve books. Ed works the other side of writing at Bewildering Stories, where he squats on the review board. This is Ed’s first feature with The Short of It.

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If you’d like to be featured on The Short of It in the future,
click here for the submission guidelines.

#TheShortofItVol 1 The Sound of Brilliance, Vol 2 Reflections & Revelations,
and Vol 3 Natures Discovered, all on Amazon

Lights On

Inspired by What do you see #330

there is clarity
in serenity
light shines in
and evokes a release

and there is clarity
in loneliness
a spotlight on
the lack of connection

as with anything in life
there are always two sides
everything and anything
has two purposes

On Track

between life and death
living is exploration
ere and soon, silence

Jane Ayres

silent borders

sleeping
on your side
of the bed
feels
transgressive
inhabiting
a bigger shape
a different space
a provocation

poem for a relative

we meet in dreams
younger versions of ourselves
carefree
the before times
when we could laugh
this family
still precious
no lines drawn

afterwards

still sitting alone in the car
i hear wind rocking
autumn-stripped branches

watch a magpie
socially distanced
on the wire fence beside
a plump wood pigeon

i listen
a lullaby of trees & sky
clouding over

& thoughts swirl
whisper
into poems
dawn-green

i sing you
our lost goodbyes
melting into ash

there is green
& there is green

i listen
still

recovery

sunny
breezy
ages since I

it felt nice
to go
further

although
it did get a bit
warm

& the wind against me
(where did that come from?)
average heart rate better

still a way to go

counting sea monsters

my father’s eyes
simply rumours
undone
seeing faces in clouds
those who went before

threnody

unmeasured
we depart
without ever
rippling
the pond

flow(er)ing

a creature of
leaf & echo
she talks
her mouth
rainfall
a tangle of treebones
she walks
her eyes twin flames
searing hearts &
spitting rainbows

the she word

sheathing swords
planting seeds
we are more than
vessel
more than
form & function
this wom(b)an
this lay/dee

in rosehip dreams

those voices
silent
silenced
letting these
small moments
grow

rapture

this time
we are advocate
we are anthem
sonic flotations
dainty renegades
bruise blue
rewilding
freefalling
as thimbles of
resurrected light
cradle our final
words

~~~

Jane Ayres was shortlisted for the 2021 Aesthetica Creative Writing Award. Her first collection ‘edible‘ was published by Beir Bua Press (July 2022), and micro-chapbook ‘my lost womb still sings to me‘ published by Porkbelly Press (October 2023) janeayreswriter.wordpress.com Jane was first featured in 2020, and was nominated for the 2022 Pushcart Prize for her piece – remembering. You can find all her work HERE.

Untitled

If you’d like to be featured on The Short of It in the future,
click here for the submission guidelines.

#TheShortofItVol 1 The Sound of Brilliance, Vol 2 Reflections & Revelations,
and Vol 3 Natures Discovered, all on Amazon

Eternal Life

boredom can’t exist when there are…

books to write on subjects not even dreamed of
an eternity of movies to watch, new or old
tried and true recipes to make and eat
foreign foods to taste and enjoy for the first time
dance moves to learn, old ones to practice
tunes of yesterday and the future to listen to
hours of nestling in soft sheets, fluffy pillows, and oversized comforters
new hobbies to learn, old ones to perfect
travels to be had to see every corner of the world
children and loved ones to snuggle
more and more books to read
humanity’s advancements to master
eternal upheavals requiring our attention
things to do we’ve not had time for, discovered yet, or overcome the fear to try

they say the lack of life is what creates its value
i say there’s never enough time navigating eternity to continually experience its value

Step Well

Panna Meena ka Kund – Wikimedia.org
Inspired by Reena’s Xploration Challenge #415
***NOTE – This is not the original image from the challenge.

decision-making
be guided by common sense
one wrong turn – fatal

States Of Being

love is there
you need to be open to it

hope comes to the defeated
needing optimism

passion is a whirlwind
affecting those craving an outcome

courage requires courage
not all want to face their fears

happiness is fleeting
luck plays a bit part

luck is really random
happens to the best and the worst of people

money is a human construct
that has screwed our world

i wish i didn’t need any of these
life would be simpler