reaching for sunrays
as all Coloradoans
(my tropical babe)

reaching for sunrays
as all Coloradoans
(my tropical babe)

we finally caved
and gave Seinfeld our money
we just need to laugh

head down, overwhelmed:
it’s hard to make solutions
for his new world

instructions, really?
i’ll pour it into a pan
and hope for the best

zucchini: the best.
it will make anything work
(yes, like my husband)

can you imagine?
finding this at age nineteen?
this gem of a love?


why, yes, that’s a bloom
after a summer snowstorm
they both still love me

first zucchini bread
(waiting for winter like me)
the sweetest present

true… at forty-two
i shouldn’t still have this hair.
but i do. i do.

my dog runs wild
nothing but joy in his heart
oh, to capture it
I don’t want to write a poem tonight. I want to bury my hands in these tomatoes, torn from the garden before the Polar Vortex stole my summer, before we ruined the Earth, before I ruined my daughter’s life. My daughter who, two years ago, proudly backpacked twenty-one miles in three days with me, never once saying it was too steep, her legs were too sore, that I was too much. My daughter who won’t even talk to me now and told me on our last camping trip that she only brought Vans, wouldn’t do a hike with me, and hates camping.
Instead I chop the last carrots, mince the onions and garlic, boil the water so the tomatoes will shed their thin skins and slip through my hands into the pot like the bloody mess that they are. The bloody mess that I am.
Now her sour mouth that she so frequents in our house has moved to the online classroom in bitter words towards teachers she barely knows, and just like everything, of course it’s my fault.
It’s my fault that I cuss out Trump and Republicans and incompetency with guttural indifference every chance I get.
That I share my opinions too blatantly with everyone I know, hence why I have so few friends.
That my girls think they can say anything they want to anyone they want and not regret it.
That I can grow a garden but not be strong enough or patient enough to save it when the time comes, when the weather report comes in and I leave half the green tomatoes on the vine, give up on the remaining zucchini, its parched flowers sucking up the snowflakes like lifeblood, half of the basil dripping from the kitchen basket, waiting to die.
Isn’t that what we are all doing, as Hemingway loathingly loved to tell us? Waiting to die?
I wish she could be in my arms again, mimicking everything her older sister said, taking two pieces of anything–sticks or pasta or dolls–and creating endless stories with characters as varied as the high school she now attends. I wish she could be my Spain girl who translated everything for Daddy by month two, who made a friend on day one, who was the only one who wanted to learn all about the Roman coliseum on a date day with me in our small city.
I wish she could be herself, not this hollow version of herself whom I fear I’ve created, carved out, destroyed.
And I wish she would come out of her room and eat her favorite meal, pasta with my hard-earned, homemade sauce, just the way my Italian grandmother used to make it with the cut-up carrots to sweeten the acidity, to tone down the bitter taste, to remember why fresh is best.
But it’s a snowy September, I don’t have a poem, and all I can do is say goodbye to my gardens.
They’ve grown up. And they hate the snow.
from smoky skies to ice
all the devil’s handiwork
(Earth in humans’ grip)

after the sun sets
stars put on their midnight show
in dark sky country

