All Water’s Moments

Well hello. I’ve been aiming my way back here for a long time. I’m sitting in my Writing Club with middle schoolers who are happily typing away on their own work. I was looking for something to work on when I stumbled upon this poem.

Do you ever have the experience of finding something you wrote long ago, and you say “Hey, wait, this is pretty good”? Well that’s what happened here. I hope you think so, too.

And I hope I’m back. Momentous things may be happening for my writing soon, and I’d love to share them with your!

All Water’s Moments

The stream is creating its course as it flows,  
not carving it
into the rocks and soil;
it is wearing them down,
so slowly and quickly
that it is happening in two
different
seconds.

This stream’s wet pattern is the laying of itself into the silt and stone,
ever creating and sustaining its path.
Thus it changes
always
now.

Thus it is creating the pattern of its own tone,
A tone made up of all its water and of all its moments:
Its great single sound
is a mingling of large and small waterfalls,
spigots,
ripples, V-shaped like bird migrations,
spouts and shallows;
water caught in rock-trap cataracts rasping and splashing,
water deep bass in shadowed crevices,
pouring so thick it is both clear and obscuring,
full flowing into the pool it is ever carving.

Only the dirt and rock can feel this streams underside, touch its other surface.
Unless I will lay in it,
dig myself down so the top of my skin
is even with the skin of the planet,
let the stream cover me
wet me,
yes, drown me,

But before that I will feel the sliding of its bottom water
On top of me.

But I will not,
because it is too cold,
and I would die.

In the ever-moments I have with this stream,
It lets me see a little of the slowness
that is hidden in its rushing,

All of its flickering frozen moments,
numberless as stars and pages.

It slows down only enough to define its slipping away.

And I see it dousing a stone, browning its tan rock skin,
And I see it part around a boulder, and the sound it makes
must be that of water tearing.

I see where the waterfall has caused a spout at its base,
so some of the water that funnels down
curves back up
and reaches its top and comes
down

so that splashes
jump

off

and I have to think it is playing, the water is playing, because if I follow a splash
down
I see it form,
bend out,
come apart and arc a diver’s curve,
and then there are so many others,
brief splashes,
about to fall back into the flow,
and I laugh,
which is why I think it’s playing,
because it’s not right to just stand by a stream
and laugh at water,
is it?

And it asks me,
in its stream language of gurgle and burble and moan,
and patter and drip,
Of low boom,
it asks, “can you see now
flowing by?”

and the sound drops back down, and there is the water, thin and fast, and there is Thoreau, of course, he’s always hanging around by the stream, and he says, “now now now now now now now now now now now now now,” until I just about hit him, and I’m about to shout, “I get it!” but he has that look on his face, the one he gets, and you realize that in that man’s mind he is only trying to teach you, and he is taking this seriously, but he also sees the humor in it, and the inherent absurdity, but also the incredible meaningfulness of it all, also that I am beneath his contempt, that we are just humble specks hurtling through space, that we are all one, and we are all separate, and how can you hit all that? I wouldn’t know where to aim.

In the Shadow of

Been a while since I did a TankaTuesday challenge. This one is to use the phrase “in the shadow of” with the task of creating contrasting imagery of real or metaphorical light and darkness.

In the shadow of of the sun, the moon waxes and wanes.
In the shadow of ambition, small achievements are lost to pride.
In the shadow of trees, shade provides cool shelter.
In the shadow of envy, what we have is lost to what we want.
In the shadow of loss, love's sad face is a mirror of what we miss.
In the shadow of the mountain, cool valleys grow by snow fed streams.
In the shadow of the moon, we remember that darkness is enlightened by stars.

Braver

I’m not always good at the struggle. Especially after 30 years of teaching, it can be really difficult to confront a misbehaving class and find constructive ways to change the situation. It’s stressful and exhausting. I mean, it’s like how many times do I have to overcome the same challenges.

At least one more time, I guess.

These lyrics were in my head this morning, and I’m so happy they were. They are from the song “Braver” by my favorite band 311. The dashed words are mine.

I know you say you're done
I know you wanna run
---- but I have to be ----
Braver, braver than anyone
Braver than anyone
Braver than anyone

I’m presently teaching a class that makes me want to say I’m done, and makes me want to run. But of course, neither is possible unless I quit.

The day I wanted 
To walk away, leave teaching
Inspired progress

Instead of walking away, I had to be brave. It’s has taken bravery to bring my administrators in on the problem. In my early career, it was risky to admit that you were having a hard time with a group. It felt like you were risking your job. Now, the model has changed, and the admin is supposed to advise without evaluating the teacher negatively. It’s also brave to confront a problem that seems to have no solution.

Brave enough to change
Courage to admit weakness
Find a better way

Getting advice and talking openly with my students has given me insight into ways that the problems can be fixed. And that we can do it together. Bravery isn’t temporary; it has to become the way.

Thanks to tankstuesday for this challenge!

A Little Negativity for Tanka Tuesday

The challenge on TankaTuesday this week was to use synonyms for promise and comfort. My mind did not go to it’s usual happy place, so enjoy a bit of a downer.

Some things can't be soothed.
A broken vow can't be fixed.
Safety is shattered.
The pledge's soothing assurance
Split into sharp edged pieces.

Macbeth Witch’s Brew Tanka

I used these ingredients from Macbeth to create my witch’s brew tanka for Tanka Tuesday: Eye of newt, toe of frog, tongue of dog, owl’s wing, adders fork and blind worms sting.

Newt pirate eye patch
A cane for the frog to match!
No more yelping dog:
Its tongue licking owl wing,
Adders fork and blind worms sting.

Three Waves

The Tanka Tuesday challenge was to use words from this word garden:

I chose wave, two, sail and castle

I wrote three Tankas focused on different meanings of the word “wave”, and included the words “two”, “sail” and “castle” to focus my wavy theme.

1.
Still water sailing
Contemplating smallest waves
Powerful enough
To lift our heavy boat up
Working with the ocean's strength

2.
She is first to wave
The only movement within
The stillest moment
And then we break free, smiling,
Surging, running, embracing.

3.
Thick brick and cold stone
An edifice of power.
A castle's defense
Has no strength to stop the wave
Flowing force of joy and love.

Not a humdrum or mindless poem

The tankatuesday challenge this week is to write a tanka based on the words “humdrum” and “mindless” without using those words.

I always try to catch myself when I allow this miraculous existence to become dull. It’s easy to coast through life without appreciation. Today’s sunrise was another glorious reminder.

It's the sun again
Same old fireball rising
Boring miracle.
Wait! That's not like me at all
I crave its light and its heat.

Tanka Puente for Tankatuesday

A Tanka Puente is a a tanka poem with a prose bridge between two parts. Mine is about my frustrated ambition to be published by a publishing company. Thanks as always to tankatuesday for the prompt.

Living inspired
Magic and my characters
Alive and speaking
My thoughts my words my stories
My world becoming the world

~My love of writing is not enough. My ambition requires publication.~

Success desired
Acceptance by publishers
Close calls, rejections
Not enough for me because
My dreams stride across the world

The Smokers Are Outside Now

All the ashtrays have been emptied 
The ashes blown to dust
Long ago.

The decorative stone ones,
The ceramic one your mother made,
The heavy one that was thick and gemlike
Faceted, bending light.

That one was too nice,
It made the ashes seem dirtier.

The cheap metal ones, bent up at four sides
That I had in college in ‘91.
That one was on the dresser:
The one I fished half smoked butts out of,
Careless of the last lips that held them.

The souvenir one that once said Canada,
The red word on the clear glass
And the maple leaf on the bottom
Faded and chipped away.

The smokers are outside now,
Or quit,
Or dead.

The ashtrays are in landfills,
In forgotten boxes in the dark cellar,
Dim corners behind old books.

Existing in their decay,
Fading to ashes.
Returning to dust.



5 Crows and a Hawk

There are five crows that hang out in our yard. I wanted them to be ravens, so I could pretend that Odin was guarding the yard. But the internet deflated this fantasy: they are indeed crows.

I really shouldn’t want more. They are GREAT crows. One day, I was sitting in the backyard, and they were perched in the trees along the property border. They began cawing, and then one took off, flew down steeply, banked around the power line pole, then accelerated back up to the starting branch.

This was cool, but then one by one they each did the same thing. The waiting crows cawed loudly, as if encouraging their mate. As they continued to fly around the pole, it was clear that they were playing. Not only that, it seemed like this was a type of drill, practicing maneuvers that would be useful in the wild.

Crows call a challenge
Leap, rise, stoop into a dive
Tilt, twist, bend their path
Beat down wings to rise again
Cawing cheers upon return

I return to this remarkable memory whenever I see them. I thought this would always be the high point, until last week. That’s when I saw one of the crows and a hawk together. Flying together.

The crow led, the hawk followed, beak almost to the crow’s tailfeathers. At first, I thought the hawk might be chasing the crow away, perhaps from a vulnerable nest. But as they flew, curving, diving, flying into tree shadow and reemerging, it became obvious that they were playing.

Thankfully Patty was there to witness this, or this would have been another of my partly believed strange animal stories.

The crow and the hawk
Fly aligned, dive together
United by flight
Transcending their barriers
Darting, flapping, rising, one.

The reality of these birds is so much better than my mythological fantasy. Still, I’d like to think Odin would be proud to have them in his real world.

This post is part of a poetry challenge at http://www.tankatuesday.com