Two Poems #morningcoffeesessions

Anti-Ode to Allergies

Inspired by ‘Ode to Common Things’ by Pablo Neruda


The infinitely small

play leap frog in my nose

resulting in a land of itch


Two pinky moist nostrils

landing strips for pesky pollen

I cannot see or smell


The so soft softness of

dandelion fluff flutters

about on tangents of

adventures on a quest

for my eyes – my lashes

gathering forests

broken blossoms that

make my eyeballs

rage with rub me


Oh, these days of whispering

willow whirls conspiring with

weed whimsy wails –

‘Tis the season of allergy atonements

my eyes my nose my tongue my throat

battlegrounds throbbing under

scratched up skin


Oh, allergy season!

Masked beneath brilliant sun

basking moon and skies

so blue they make birds scream

Your costume of summer is a

tricky ruse – theatrics

Shakespearean in the

tragedies of my inflamed body


Oh, allergy season!

You saucy fox!

Go back into your hole!

Hibernate amongst the

thirsty roots and cicada cocoons

Give my face rest!


Summer is a treasure in golds

A scattering of spring’s things

pushed skyward – lift them

up up up and away

Oh, wind, oh wild, wild wind!

Carry off these remnants

wreaking havoc on my senses.


Farewell season of allergies –

Away! Away! Away!



A Writer’s What Ifs


What if I wrote one story at a time?

What if I taught myself how to focus

on one set of poems

one group of characters

at a time. What if I

stayed with them until their stories

were completely told?

What if I dedicated the same hours

each day to delivering the words

kindly gently powerfully to the page?

What if discipline wasn’t a bumpy path

but a paved road bathed in sunlight?

What if I was the kind of writer who

finished one project at a time?

And finishing garnered a minor celebration

maybe a slice of pie and a cup of tea

before heading into the hilly land of revisions?

What if the words were always priority

silver-plattered ahead of everything except

illness, births and deaths?

What if when the story was finished

revised with reds edited with enthusiasm

a bell would ring in my throat and I’d know

it was time to send it into the world?

What if I wasn’t afraid to submit?

What if I wasn’t wounded by rejection?

What if I always re-submitted instead of giving up?

What if I got an agent?

What if I got a book deal?

What if I got film rights and the characters got

another life on the big screen?

What if through all these types of

successes and failures – I kept writing?

I kept dedicating the same hours each day

to delivering the words kindly gently powerfully

to the page?


What if I taught myself how to stop

comparing words and I just loved them?

What if each day opened like a book and

I trusted the inky shapes of fine letters and

the peaceful tradition of time flowing and

I wrote what I wrote when I wrote it?

And I loved each necessary letter even

If it got edited out?

What if I ate pie and sipped tea

whenever I so desired?


What if ‘what if’ didn’t matter?

The words always lived

Inside and out

of me


A writer.



These days are steeped in grief. Poems comes and go like memories. My pauses in sharing…in communication…in community…the only way I know how to navigate. There is much to witness and so I am witnessing. Holding. Finding respite in privacy.



Be kind. Be peaceful.

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Published on June 24, 2020 07:04
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