Saturday, May 2, 2009

trillium
















Out with the old and in with the new,
It’s time for the spring renewal.

Complete new plumbing end to end,
A father son project prepares the cabin
For the next decade to be enjoyed
With in line hot water showers.

A fresh set of storage batteries
To hold the photovoltaic charge,
New LED lights brighten up
The corners and recesses.

The hammock will soon swing
On the new back porch.
The cabin will soon extend and enlarge
Into something we imagine.

I love this place
And most of all I love sharing it.
I love knowing I will be here when I am gone
And it is passed to you and yours.

I take a short walk up the stream
Past the main waterfall, past the upper pool
And chance upon an expanse of trillium flowers
So rare, so crimson, such passion.

The water caresses the smooth rocks,
The sunlight ripples in the lens of gentle waves,
Such exquisite beauty all around,
With the great expanse of summer ahead of us.

Tuesday, April 28, 2009

everything is everything




Five drake mallards paddling aligned with their wave
As if these ducks were invited to some male bonding ritual
As evening approaches after a delightful warm spring day
And April first blossoms are giving way to the coming of glorious May.

What’s missing from this picture?
Where are their mates? Hidden away.
Sitting somewhere nearby on their clutches.
This is the nesting season when what is not seen is what matters most.

I am out for a bike ride along the familiar route
Along the tidal creek out to the shores of the estuary
Enjoying the sights and sounds and smells,
Enjoying my energy and movement and meditation.

The perfume of the blooms reaches me as I glide past in a moment of bliss.
And all along the way the birds call out in their spring songs.
I hear robins, cardinals, red wing black birds, blue jays, too,
And some I don’t know and can’t see, always the mystery.

Such a sensual pleasure it is to be alive here today.
Nothing else matters for the moment.
Such a magical connected feeling between inner and outer.
Everything is everything is good to know.

Thursday, April 23, 2009

april light



















Sunday, April 19, 2009

In all honesty


I’ve made a mess of my relationships with women
And not done so great with men, either.
What is it with me?
I get along with myself well enough.

I enjoy the world around me.
I enjoy figuring things out.
I’m sensitive to what people are feeling
And sympathetic for the most part.

But something happens where I say the most off-putting things.
The words come out I’m not sure why.
And it’s weird enough that others keep their distance.
There’s a screw loose as they say.

It’s the elephant in the room.
I must talk about it.
I can’t ignore it like it doesn’t exist.
As they say, denial is not a river in Egypt.

Is there no hope for me pairing off again?
I’m getting less and less interested in going along
For the sake of getting along.
I’d rather keep to myself and my inner life.

I’ve met plenty who have had their own wrecks
Most who blame it all on the other person,
Many who have their financial agenda motivation,
Some who seem extra careful about taking risks.

None who fall for me.
None who sweep me away.
Is it because our hormone levels are down?
Sometimes I think I went for the archetypes.

You know, a certain pout to the mouth,
The way the eyes are set in the face,
Some way the syllables sound,
Perhaps a gesture with the hand.

No wonder it went so wrong.
Looking back I wonder what was I thinking?
I wasn’t thinking.
I was dreaming.

Tuesday, April 14, 2009

april icons
















Sunday, April 12, 2009

Alleluia




My individual existence is temporary in the time space continuum
And yet I fear not the end as I knew not the beginning.
The perception that I exist separately is an illusion.
The breath inside me is the same breath of life that infused the ancients.

I sleep alone but I do not live alone.
I am like a cell in a living organism.
It did not begin with me. It will not end with me.
Ashes and dust, love and lust, the circle of life keeps spinning.

The genetic makeup expressed in me is human
And binds me with all of humanity.
Search back your tree and my tree to the same ancestors.
Search ahead and imagine the future hosts of our threads.

Search back and back the tree of life to the beginning
And we are one with every living creature.
And every creature is made of the stuff of the world
And everything dances as a speck in the cosmos.

Awareness of the transitory self in the universe,
How humbling. Reverence and awe belong to science
As much as to religion. False dichotomy.
Science reveals wonders truly amazing.

Look in the night sky and imagine seeing the past
When the light reaches you from some long ago millennia.
Look at the geology around you and think in geological time
What matters your individual existence except for what you leave behind?

What are the greatest gifts that will be my legacy?
You will feel my love, may it comfort you in the years ahead.
I give you ideas and a vision that it might stir your imagination.
And I give you moral values to guide you when everything changes.

Wednesday, April 8, 2009

easter plants in view
















Sunday, April 5, 2009

dirty old men


“Come here and let me fix your belt,” said the old man stranger.
The very young boy was a first time visitor to that house.
And I obeyed the adult authority figure,
And moved not a muscle as he touched my genitals.

I was shaken and confused.
Later I told my mother. She only said
“Don’t go back there ever again.”
Now I’m an old man and I can still feel his hand on me.

I was maybe six years old. I know the precise details.
The house was in Waltham at the foot of the hill
Not far from the entrance to Brandeis.
I was taken there with my friend Nicky Twigg.

You see how a few seconds can last a lifetime?
It was not until I was in my forties that it dawned on me
Why I have a ticklish spasm in my abdomen
When anyone reaches towards my waist.

That was not the end of it, not at all,
But it was the end of talking about it.
It was worse when I was twelve
At the doctor getting a physical exam.

That lasted it seemed forever.
I just about stopped breathing.
My mother had taken me there and I wondered
“Has she asked him to determine my maturity?”

After he let me go and I emerged back to the waiting room
Speechless, almost stumbling, paler than pale,
My mother asked, “What happened?”
I said nothing. That was Dr. Sylvester.

His office was across the street from the Congregational church.
I don’t remember ever going back there again.
I can tell you I much prefer women doctors.
Who knows how many others besides me he violated?

I was barely twenty when I married a young woman
Who didn’t remember her childhood and didn’t want to remember,
Whose life was controlled by acute phobias and fears
That couldn’t be acknowledged or talked about.

I was past forty when I married a woman whose stepfather had molested her,
Making a connection through a related shared experience,
Realizing that all the women in my life who have touched my heart
Have themselves been affected in some way like this.

But what is this connection? It is some kind of intuition I have.
I sense the childhood loss of innocence and trust not unlike mine.
It has put me in touch with my feminine side which is a blessing,
But it doesn’t make a relationship work.

On the contrary, it makes for a challenge.
At least I know what doesn’t work.
That’s a start, but it’s not even half way there.
What are the lessons here?

If you can’t remember or can’t or won’t talk about it,
That’s called denial.
It screams out in the silence.
That was my first divorce.

If you talk about it only as a childhood victim unaware of the adult behavior
Where we attack the ones we love still reacting to the trauma,
That is no less impossible to make a marriage.
That was my second divorce.

And yet I am still seeking someone now in my sixties.
You might say I am a slow learner, repeating my mistakes.
I am a lifelong learner, that’s for sure, and I’ll keep trying.
It’s possible I’ll get one more chance.

Friday, April 3, 2009

frog pond












Thursday, April 2, 2009

rainy day charleston
















Tuesday, March 31, 2009

awendaw
























Saturday, March 28, 2009

brodiaea


Sunday, March 22, 2009

lyme rickety

















You are standing there again where you stood as a bright-eyed boy so long ago
In front of the hardscrabble poultry farmhouse where you grew up during the Great Depression.
You are about to begin the next chapter in your life.
You have come to get centered and we come along to see and learn.

It is what the mathematicians call a “zero trip” for you returning here.
All the vectors of direction and distance to all the places you have ever been
In the seventy some years from then to now all add up to zero.
But such a wealth of experience, knowledge and wisdom has filled you along the way!

You were here before your great lifelong happiness with your true love now gone from us.
You are here again, collecting yourself to persevere and continue on without her.

So here is this place out in the back woods where today the dirt road is in mud season ooze
Like it was then when your father took his family to scratch with the chickens
And eke out a marginal existence desperate for better times to return.
And we see that even today the current inhabitants are struggling to make ends meet.

It was hard having only a potbelly stove for heat against the harsh New Hampshire winter.
It was scary having a house fire started by a kerosene lamp in that rickety house in Lyme.
It was difficult with a finishing school mother fallen on hard times
And a frustrated father needing financing to build his great inventions.

But there were sweet happy memories here for you, too,
The kind of delights a boy will find no matter what troubles the adult world.

We see the two room schoolhouse and hear about climbing snowdrifts to walk there,
Less than 20 students all told, one room first to fourth grade, one fourth to eighth.
But you did get an excellent education somehow,
I think by reading everything you could get your hands on.

It ended in tragedy, your father despairing and taking his life,
Leaving your mother alone to keep a roof over your head and food in the pantry,
Moving to town for work, placing you in a “real” high school where you would meet your true love,
Because every crisis is an opportunity, one door closes and another door opens.

I think for that boy each day was a gift with joys to be found for the looking.
May you embrace that child as your companion and comfort in the days ahead.

Wednesday, March 18, 2009

spring peepers


Sunday, March 15, 2009

between seasons