Tuesday, November 1, 2011

Poems in November Month

Howdy y'all...

November's back again, and so is the poetry! Join me, if you would be so kind, as I muddle through another 30 poems (this time, hopefully, with friends j and cissy alongside me offline/online) and see what this construction of my perception comes up with.

A haiku, simple and sweet to start:

So today begins
another journey into
a vast poetic...



Until tomorrow...
xErica

Monday, June 13, 2011

Just One More Time...

As Addonizio is prolific in form poems, I thought I'd try again at the love sonnet. Not nearly as juicy, but what can I say...I'm just a big softie...

Just One More Time

It's one more time that I get to kiss you.
One more time to count all of your freckles.
One more time to wake up and remember
that your nose is incredibly special.

One more time watching you walk down the hall.
Just one more time to be thinking in twos.
One more time whispering nothing at all,
except I love you, I love you, I do.

Each time you climb out of bed or each time
doors close behind you as a chance to say
Whoever you are, please give me a sign,
blessed on my lips, just one more time today.

Because no matter how long we are one
I'll have one more time on the tip of my tongue.

Sunday, June 12, 2011

When Poetry is So Good

I had the pleasure and privilege of supporting a course today and one of the participants chose to take more time for herself and do things that she enjoyed just for her. One of these things was to write poetry.

I couldn't resist at the break asking her about the poets she read, and when she asked for recommendations I couldn't resist talking about Kim Addonizio. Multiple poems came to mind-- "Fuck," "Bugdom," "Miniatures"--but this one is so good I had to type it up for you:

You Don't Know What Love Is

but you know how to raise it in me
like a dead girl winched up from a river. How to
wash off the sludge, the stench of our past.
How to start clean. This love even sits up
and blinks; amazed, she takes a few shaky steps.
Any day now she'll try to eat solid food. She'll want
to get into a fast car, one low to the ground, and drive
to some cinderblock shithole in the desert
where she can drink and get sick and then
dance in nothing but her underwear. You know
where she's headed, you know she'll wake up
with an ache she can't locate and no money
and a terrible thirst. So to hell
with your warm hands sliding inside my shirt
and your tongue down my throat
like an oxygen tube. Cover me
in black plastic. Let the mourners through.

- Kim Addonizio, What is This Thing Called Love

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I want to make words do this....

Wednesday, February 2, 2011

Haikus for Mom's Birthday

She spoke the truth when
she said: Here's to the mother
who let her do it.


Like the brown groundhog,
you're my brunette cautionary
for not fucking up.


No one makes breakfast
--waffles, bacon, scrambled eggs--
like you do, at noon.


For each of your gifts,
you are thoughtful of your theme:
mostly, it's called love.


I can talk a lot
of nothing of consequence;
thank you for listenin'.


HAPPY BIRTHDAY MAMA....

Tuesday, December 21, 2010

A Birthday Poem

We rode the train from Brighton to London yesterday through hills and fields covered in snow. It was beautiful. Breathtaking. And I decided to write a poem as we went, a poem about the different shapes of the day of my birth. Later on, at the party in Balham Bowls Club, I read it to the friends of mine who had gathered for the red balloon bash.

Here it is for you:

On the Day of My Birth

There was a pond kept neat for winter revelers
and we skated in seven degree weather,
four of us teens tucked away in a mountain secret.

Before that, the snow fell on Turre St.
in flakes the size of cotton balls on my birthday
as my friends took their sleeping bags
and backpacks from their parents' cars
and giggled their way into the house.

For the next three years, it snowed on the day of my birth
and we piled into Mom's peach mobile, drove
around the town looking at Christmas lights and singing carols.

Later, on the day of my birth,
my lover got on a place and moved home.
A year after, she came back to collect me
but first snuggled into the white duvet,
our room the third floor of an art deco hotel.

On the day I was born, I've been ill, my partner's been sick,
and I've worked a Sunday shift. My dad's given me an opal
necklace, to keep the fire of his love close to my heart.
My mom sends a book of poetry each year.

When I turned three, I'd celebrated in so many house,
I asked if I was now four. And once, we had a party in June
when I was five and a half and it wasn't the day of my birth at all.

Twenty-six years on, I've seen a quarter century,
made new homes and new friends, and ice skated
more time than I can remember.
A snowflake drifting on the day of my birth.

Friday, December 17, 2010

The Christmas Spirit

I survey the scene of my home from my white plush robe and armchair: the berry lights are lit, the tree decorated, the presents wrapped under the tree. The carpet is vacuumed, the plants are water, the dishes left undone (but I'm not too worried about them). The Winter Songs album is playing with the latest rendition of Frosty the Snowman. I am ready.

And waiting.

On a train travelling through the depths of the London streets, which have just received a dusty of snow, is my brother and his girlfriend. They are headed my direction, my brother just off a transatlantic flight. I can't bring myself to do anything but wait in anticipation. The excitement almost tangible that I don't know how to react to daily life it seems. The last time I was this nervous/excited/dazed was my first wedding day in April: I woke up before the sunrise and needed to laugh to relieve the tension.

But now, now, I cradle the laptop as a distraction device, write to you, and think, well, this is part of the Christmas Spirit isn't: waiting for your loved ones to arrive through whatever the weather, the kitchen a little dirty, and your home warm and open. Sigh.

Friday, December 10, 2010

Dreaming of Warm Sunshine

Travelling home on the tube on Tuesday evening something reminded me of a back yard I used to play in as an older kid: nine or ten years old, playing with my friend Bree while her mom 'babysat' us. Bree was always a lot of fun and we made the back yard our playground even though it was mostly dust and fallen plums in the shadow of eucalyptus trees.

Catching Flies

Being with Bree, even catching flies was fun.

More than fun, it became an afternoon's mission:
holding her plastic atrium poised, we waited
for the right moment to strike, the other of us grasping
the purple lid that would ultimately secure the flies
in their new four-walled, see-through world.

The fact that her back yard--a softly sloping hill,
dust we kicked up and hundreds of fallen plums--
vibrated with little winged creatures didn't really bother us.

My memory, even then, tinted the scene in sepia--
tones of eucalyptus trees and childhood--
and her hair glinted gold down the length of her back.

She held me in wonder, even catching flies.