Imperfect Landing

a simple request
straddles me between two worlds
a scale i once tipped

if grins and roses
were all that i’m meant to be
i’d bury my soul

balance beam choices
split, backwards flip, wheelbarrow,
toe-dip for the win?

or flatten my hands
my feet flying above me
upside down: myself.

This Park is Our Church

this park is our church
(we rode past three on the way)
god is in details

dress-obsessed oldest
on a limb over a lake
this windy fall day

blessed to have new friends
and her two shadow sisters
nothing like my youth

(how i would have loved
my sister to include me–
just to be my friend)

outdoor play keeps them
a ring of companionship
beauty comes in threes

we don’t need sabbath
just the joy of our family
god lives in us all

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Halloween Hell Party

Janis Joplin hair
might as well accept it’s mine
Happy Halloween

drive to edge of earth
that’s how far money stretches
there’s never enough

space, bedrooms, hardwood
three people and all their shit
spread suburban sloth

walkability
on a scale of one to ten?
tractor crossing sign

there is no number
to measure my distaste here
size shouldn’t matter

Americans Dream
big, better phallic boasting
in the shape of homes

American Dream:
be Janis Joplin–different
don’t let it kill you

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He Swam Anyway

When we were young, we’d spend weekends together. In and out of feeding your pets, checking the eyes of all your animals, and making sure all the blinds were closed, he’d pop in with bits of advice.

“Did you know, Olivia, that practicing the piano just thirty minutes a day could make you an expert? Imagine if you just gave something thirty minutes a day, how much it could change your life?”

And I didn’t know then. I just knew that you had an exchange student from France and in less than a month your father taught him how to play the guitar. They’d sit out on the front porch on late summer nights, strumming away and making you wish there were another way to reach him…

Before I even really knew you, your height intimidating my tiny eighth-grade stature, he came to our class. He called on each and every one of us, and strummed along, and asked for lines, and wrote on the board, and made us the string of words that would build our first-ever creative writing Class Poem. Our first… and our last. How I remember his sweet soul, his kindness… his willingness to be there for that shy soul who stood behind her six-foot frame… the frame he gave to you, the one he shaped you with.

And I didn’t know then. All I knew was that he loved you.

Your mom told me about the dream she had of your brother’s name. How she screamed at him for coming up with such a thing… and then placed it upon him, for the sake of your father. Everything, always, was for the sake of your father.

That tall-as-a-giant, skinny-as-a-rail Panamanian frame. Your June videos standing in the Panama rain in front of his childhood home. One of twelve, he swam in that canal, knowing some of his friends had died… he swam anyway, survived, and made you. You. Strong behind the shyness, my always-there, always-and-forever loving best friend.

And I didn’t know then, that video-viewing summer. Just that you were there, home with him, and that he loved you.

His thick brown-framed glasses and record collection. The wedding invitation and picture-of-black-man my mother painted, framed with his hands in that little back-porch room, Bellas Artes. “Te amo, Ita,” his heritage shared across the generations. And that picture you put up, you smaller than the body of the guitar he strummed for your infant sleep… How he loved you.

And I knew then… on my wedding day. But it didn’t matter. The white frame on my wedding invite? A gift that would last forever. Even after he was gone.

When grief takes over, life become a series of ‘What Ifs.’ What if I had loved him more? What if I had taken him to the dentist? What if I had come one day earlier? What if he never met my mother? What if he never joined the Army? What if he never knew what it felt like to have a drink? What if I had gone alone?

It will never end. It will never, ever. Ever end.

And I knew then… that day you sent me the texts. When I called and heard your hollow voice. That it was over. That all the pain that had sloshed in his mouth and washed out his heart and that left you with your ‘What Ifs…’ I knew about the demons. About the emptiness that trails like a shadow at the back of your beautiful life. About the love that will never die, just like he would never die, because he swam anyway, and beat the Panama Canal. He swam, sang, fought, and lived for you. He swam anyway, swallowing his demons, making you the amazing woman you are today.

What if he never swam? What if he never made it to the shore?

And I knew then… He swam anyway. He swam for you.

Keep swimming, my friend. Keep swimming.

Let Grief Live

a rainy Sunday
filled with empty prayers to god
that i can’t quite hear

imagine this life
wasted living for heaven
all to hide our grief

let grief live on earth
with our hands upon our hearts
bleeding to let go

the clouds broke evening
god did not exempt the rain
it flooded our souls

Dark Spotlight

once my side of town
now the other side of death
my heart aches for you

white clown suit darkness
metaphor for life we live
hidden in darkness

how he played guitar
for my beautiful best friend
for my soul sister

i am a true friend
because my love never stops
my love never stops

it starts with the truth
the truth of that death moment
when you were reborn

when i cried for you
you hate to cry publicly
even for our love

spotlight on darkness
as bright as mansions’ windows
or September rain

either way, we love
living for the dark secrets
while god drives us home

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Glory Be Home

environs burning
a newly bright beginning
but are you two-faced?
will you sell my soul for yours?
beautiful, that face of yours

my girl as witness
to the only one i trust
how she knows my heart

i stand in ashes
created by betrayal
all the years back, us
how you’d turn that pretty face
and become the enemy

but leaves are falling
and i crunch my way back home
you’ll never hear it

half-circle of chairs
watching dog-walkers pass by
we munch our minions
share the glory of our days
glory be home to our days

Life. Love. Loss.

before dawn message
asks permission for my love
i’m awake, ready

my soul sister breaks
before the sun emerges
i’d give her my life

sleep is a present
unpresent in this week’s life
seven days of hell

he flies tomorrow
what if he doesn’t make it
in time for her death?

my girls play the wii
squealing with best friend’s pained joy
parents’ illness wins

and yet they smile
dress up in formal attire
perfect for their game

living life scares me
as i list all my boyfriends
kindergarten up

ask him to recall
if he searched for love like me
or found it at home

he cannot answer
too consumed by coming grief
losing his mother

they will play all night
and go vacation their dreams
never knowing loss

that is what i want
no search for school boyfriends
just love at home. LOVE.

Cheers and Tears

longest week ever
ending with happy hour
tears still in ducts

Memorialize Him

because he came in
and wrote with us a class poem
when we were thirteen

because he’s your dad
forget the swallowed disease
because he made you

for twenty-eight years
your mom gave her life to him
because she loved him

because demons live
even if we wished they’d die
that is why, that’s why

because he deserves
what a father, husband should
he’s not forgotten

because you found him
in your heart, you always knew
that you would find him

the mother of three
raised at home with two parents
he was one of them

because of our youth
the car, recording our voice
and all the journals

he’s in every one
saw through demons to love you
because he loved you

you are my best friend
and he made you, he made you
that is why, that’s why