Forever
There is a small, rounded pebble painted sky-blue by the hand of a young girl before she speckled it pink and yellow with flowers. The pebble has been carefully placed, as though it was as fragile as an egg, upon a tuft of green grass that is growing in the thin layer of loose, leafy-black dirt which has accumulated through the years inside the scaly crook of an oak tree’s branches. The tree (just as the girl had) also holds the pebble as though it was fragile; and the tuft of grass, and the accumulated soil, cradling them all tightly under it’s canopy as the far-away sky roils, and rumbles. With swaying hands and stiff fingers the tree creaks and moans, warning away the storm, though it could us the water the storm would bring, as could the golden sea of grass rolling like waves around it.
But there is no chancing it now, as a connection was made between living things, and the tree would retain this precarious hold on it’s charge forever if it must until the girl returns… until the girl returns… until the girl returns…
Flash
a flash flood on the highway
everyone stopping
manic windshield wipers
torrential downpour
tires two feet under
on the east coast
where we all had to
slow down to see it
a rainbow over the mountains
invincible beauty
yesterday I saw a sign
here in California
“DROUGHT
2 Days Of Water”
and thought back
to when
there was enough
to saturate our thirsty desires
A Bench in a Desolate Field.
The grass sways gently in the breeze,
The trees, in sets of threes, are the only shade around.
Across the field of grass.
Between two clusters of oak trees,
Sits a swinging bench.
Sits a lonely bench.
It has no one to accompany it.
It has no person to swing on it.
All it has is little gusts of wind,
and piles of leaves.
The Sea
The seas rumbled and roared and heaved, tossing black slabs of icy water into the wind. White tipped waves spitting foam and mist plunged snarling into depths roiling with currents strong enough to rip boats from hull to stern. Drums, thundering, pounding, unfurled into purple and black bellied clouds hanging low and heavy in the sky. Every so often, with a crack like a whip, fork-tongued lighting came lashing down in blinding streaks of silver and white. On that distant horizon, more rumbling thunderclouds bringing sheets and sheets of heavy rain. The winds, having rallied, came hurtling down in a deafening cacophony of screeches and shrieks and screams. The sea, black bodied and thunderous, rose to meet it, roaring a challenge with its gaping maw parted wide.
Summer Breeze
Ahhh! Hey y’all! Well it’s a sunny day out here, we are on the white sandy beach at Gulf Shores national park in Alabama. The breeze is perfect comin’ off the ocean, and the water is just right to wade into.
It’s not too crowded here this weekend and I love watching the young families
with their children playing and building sand castles. Some people are playing with their dogs in the waves, haha, it’s really funny to watch.
Uh oh! Some sea gulls are stealing some picnic food! They are tricky birds and smart too! Oh! Don’t leave the door to your camper open or your tent or you will have a covey of feathered friends making a mess of everything eww!
As I look out towards the west, the hottest guy just walked by! Wow!
Ok composing myself.
Late July
Late July
and the concrete burns like charcoal embers
We dance and skip across the driveway
like pigeons playing hopscotch
The grass is bright and green and cool
A blanket on which we play
Leaping through the sprinkler
Like tiny madmen on fire
The air smells of earth and sun and joy
Lips stained red and blue
And we stretch and grow as the sun feeds our souls
Time is an abstract concept
Punctuated only by the grumble of a hungry belly
Wrapped in brightly colored towels
We sit and shiver and with hurried bites we eat
And only stop to sip the tinny, ice cold water from the hose
The sun is setting in colors that blaze across the atmosphere
Fiery at first then pinks and blues
A perfect cotton candy sky
Warm breezes that wrap around our bodies like a blanket
The smell of jasmine as it opens to the moon
The night is languid and fills with stars
We catch them in our hands
They blink and fly and disappear
In Late July
Rainforest
Around me it is beautiful.
The leaves on the trees,
delicately coated with droplets
of rain-
are greener than the greenest
emeralds.
And the river
Oh! The river-
it sparkles,
clearer than glass
and brighter than the whitest
smile.
Here there are the loveliest orchids
and hummingbirds hover around them,
feeding joyously.
Here there are creatures incomprehensibly
unique,
creatures that you can find
nowhere else.
Here there is light,
there is beauty,
and there is life.
It was barely a trail
More the suggestion of a trail, a natural break in the trees where deer had left their marks in the mud, a heady mixture of swamp and decay so strong you could taste it. The dog didn't care about the mud or the brush or the branches, those were background noise to his senses, whatever the deer left behind was some sort of hypnotic elixir to his nose. The sunlight flickered through the spring leaves, the wind flittered and kicked that fresh shade of green that oaks wear so well. I should have worn my boots, so now the muddy trail was devolving into a swamp, the dog mindlessly marched and splashed on, I didn't dare to disturb his earthy frolic down a muddy trail into the woods, my job was to watch for snakes and ticks and water too deep, but I saw none of those things that day in the woods.