Spring Up

June blooms beg pictures

celebrating record bursts

(pro-quality plants)

if we visit pros

and take similar pictures

can you spot the change?

my yard is heaven

for botanical beauty

bloomed by a wet spring

Dog Days

dog adventure day:

dog parks to dog patios

to reign in summer

Broken Blossoms

life lived in moments

from crises to remedies

(one day’s event course)

broken cars and drains

cannot break twenty-one years

of kept promises

so let’s build fires

to burn the losses of life

and collars of hope

because even pup

knows how to tolerate pain

as peonies pop

Wait for It…

waiting for summer

as peonies slowly bloom

just after sunrise

Eid Mubarak

a sudden blossom

blooming for summer’s promise

and a New Moon feast

The Adolescence of My Motherhood

strawberry rhubarb

can’t save our relationship

no matter how sweet

i’ll have to find words

to fill the lattice loopholes

between bites of love

A Day at a Time

between this sunrise

painted so perfectly pink

and this steak dinner

lay a fasting day

of walking, planting, napping

fifteen days, hours

Outsider


always on the edge

is how i fit into life

never quite fitting

Mayday, Please

ducks out of water:
pre-dawn street imagined lake
(if wishes came true)
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children out of school:
three-day lockout nightmare ends
with music, of course

my daughter baking:
better than the gifts, the brunch
(love with our rhubarb)

Enough

I remember newspapers for a week filled with grisly details,

journalists  flooding our city like vampires in search of storied blood

I remember crying all day on my twenty-first birthday,

the tears permanent streaks of worry on my cheeks.

I remember thinking, How can I become a teacher now?

and also, Nothing could be worse than this.

 

I remember that it was ten miles from my home,

with faces just like my own now plastered on screens across the world.

I remember thinking that it could never happen again,

that with this media spotlight on the atrocity, it wouldn’t.

 

I remember my first lockdown, two years later,

kids huddled alongside me under desks like rats in a sewer.

I remember the silent votes of every white man and woman

in charge of our devolving society that grips guns like lifeblood.

 

I remember clutching my six-year-old child for hours

after twenty of her American peers were murdered

for the love of the Second Amendment.

 

I remember living in Spain where the scariest sound

was an infantile firecracker celebrating El Día de San Juan

and every door was open for the world to walk into

what it might be like to Not. Be. Afraid.  

 

I remember when I once believed that someone would shout,

Enough is enough! and Congress would listen

instead of filling their pockets with NRA dollars.

 

I remember my high school in the ‘bad neighborhood,’

before a police officer stood at the door,

before I’d ever heard the word lockdown,

before I even knew what we would become.