I used to gather rocks shiny stones precious metals and things, I thought had permanence, but now I will only go for cuttings with stems just so, bright red or pink I think on top
I like to look at hunks of wood, see the life-rings layered, a round embrace, years upon years in evidence
I like to see a cloud well formed in a frameless sky, or wispy shapes of nothing but Cyrus percolating droplets, hints rain
I once liked mountains and property, a deep footed house surrounded by trees, I once liked, permanence
now I prefer the open, unlined, spaces that cannot be so easily defined
I like to remember that I am temporary as was my father dead now, his ashes are breath behind my ear, dead like my niece some 15 years ago dying like my mother whose days blow down the sidewalk, crumpled leaves
I like to see things of beauty that are short-lived reminding me why pretend I am more than just barely, I thought barely a moment barely worth reckoning in fact nothing at all, wetted pages of Mozart or Chopin I’ll reach for them and watch them tear in my hand
I want to see a mood a whim and other changing things give me nothing that stays or I know you lie you are not any greater than Babylon nor am I
I am nothing but for who made me, else to pretend I want not, I have an old set of China from my mother’s wedding day you can finish that thought
When I was young my legs were strong my joints did not hurt my hair was thick I had potential like you I had use I had years ahead like a thick bank roll of quid and now my neck has wrinkles and I am gray and
my dad died a week ago today
I don’t want anything more than a flower than the truth that we are this this creature this creation this borrowed bit
I will holler louder come Lord Jesus come I will shake my fist it’s just temporary anyways like this
This is enough, “Carry-on,” the officer said, “nothing here to see,”
my dad died a week ago today
and even that is over please delete when you are done, no tip on self care just a poem. Keep on.