Wednesday, May 30, 2018

Gecko Weather


Brick by brick, sun moves from morning to porch
Rain comes with breathing:  bright, dim, breeze, drop--
Slip into the holes between nubby heat and green.

Until the hot storm.

Slash of shadow, cold, cold, cold
Water over green, shove dirt over pot lip,
Drown one side or leap

Sling myself along the metal
Hot, drop, slide: lizard/water/shadow
Until the hot storm goes inside.

Thanks to Carrie for tonight's prompt (any animal's POV). It seems like a good point in the week for something light and, given the weather, always a good time to remember not to drown the lizards while trying to keep the vines on the porch from being too shriveled. As for the amateur gecko sketch? Yeah, that was the invisible child next to me at the table @Starbucks. Really.

-- Chrissa

Monday, May 28, 2018

Storm The Sun


Gather us swift as you find this shore;
Hunger tangles our feet in snares, all but wings
Sweep wind stiff as dried grass around you:
Tempest-clothed, gull-frothed.
Walk the beach with our cry, not the water
In the wind you raise. A scream, like strings.

No one sees her feet upon the strand,
drowned or dry.

Someone has baked a crust with butterfly wings
Fanning the oven-hot afternoon, a swirl of pan and hips.
Surely no one prays the storm above the steam,
No one shatters the roof of a doll's house in the sunflower bed
Broken in the boat of the sun, the crèche of day.

There is no grief we can't pick away, bird and breeze,
Like bologna and cheese.

Gather us, mother of the storm, walk in chiffon like egg
Splattered upon the sand, something rising, half-born.
Oh, storm. We swoop into your skirts, your children.
Who calls you? Who breaks the nest, drops the star
To watch a universe solidify, unborn, on the shore?

The above is being cross-posted at The Sunday Muse's Muse #6 and owes its existence not to a storm but rather to what feels like an all-too-early summer and a beastly headache. Not above thinking kindly on a few storm clouds to dull the glare.

-- Chrissa

Sunday, May 20, 2018

Dandelions


We pull the night birds up to our shoulders, wrap ourselves tight
In the leaves and blood they wove to stifle our nightmares.
When do we dream, she asks.
Days past swarm her, flickering in the half-light.
They nip our leaves until we sieve them from the night,
Toss the old days into pots where they swim to the roots of the world.
We walk the darkness. We take stories like the rain
Along our bodies, soaking what we're given for clothing,
Sustaining the days we catch and release.

Both of us, sisters and witch's daughters, don't dream.
She looks up as the sun rolls beneath the soles of her feet.
Don't look down, she warns.
I pull her close.
It rolls on.
Rises. We fall, asleep.
Your lives come to drown us.

Dandelions flood the bottom of the ditch, pouring from the suburbs.
Roads pulse with cars, fast food, prescriptions discounted, green light, red--
Words cram themselves together like cars
Eager for the turn-in.
Black birds, yellow bills race behind the red emergency curb
Long enough to verify the trash is sterile, then
Fly to another pole that hums with another kind of remnant,
Bits of word in heat and motion, data harmonics
Tuning in the warming breeze while the birds' throats shiver.
Heat waves' shadows ripple in the opening of the door,
Everyone balanced within Rube's device, a great plastic
Laundry basket ready to catch that mouse,
The one with ears like your toddler.
Our fingers wind through the bars.

Fishy, fishy, fishy. Here's your bowl.

This is being shared to both The Sunday Muse's Muse #5 and Poets United's Poetry Pantry #404. Thanks to Carrie for suggesting the gorgeous image above, which in no way deserved the aspersions I may have cast upon it. I'm sure the sisters are quite nice once you get to know them.

Thanks for reading and have a wonderful week!

Sunday, May 6, 2018

When the Ribbons Unravel


You don't know they're like muzzles, these sleek silken tassels
Which fly like it's their freedom breathing, a gifted disaster.

Let them fall.

When the water comes up over the linoleum--you wanted
Water to fall, tension to break humidity's plan to stifle us
But as soon as you feel the cool, you crumble. Those feet--
You were raised on this clay, born from it, stand on it.
Thought your knees would never drop this fast to the flood.
There are only islands, only rough pedestals cover in dust
From the feet who have scuffed over them, watching water
Take to each low place and then to the high.

Let them fall.

You didn't know what flits away, already speaking in tatters
How many times they've given us such a gift, a disaster.

This is being posted for Poets United Poetry Pantry #402 and The Sunday Muse The Muse #4. This really didn't go where I was thinking it would--I love the colors of the image above and didn't really think it would be the tiger...or the storm...that crept out. :) Hope you have a great week and thanks for reading!

Chrissa

Tuesday, May 1, 2018

Looking Up

The breeze is cool, then spattered with chill, then blowing through a flurry of raindrops, then cool again. Varda is curled up at my waist, a rivulet of warmth to balanced out the breeze and sharp book on the other. I'm thinking about getting up and making tea, trying to gauge when cool and breeze will become rainy and paper-destroying.

As I close my eyes, the tea and the rain skim over a sudden memory:  drinking water from a fountain in elementary school, a cool, metallic spurt that you have to catch, pressing the button carefully. I'm thirsty, surfing the line between comfortable and drenched. And now more thirsty and Varda is becoming restless as the neighbor dogs whine and the clouds grow closer. It's the kind of Texas day when you know the sun and the heat are lurking just on the other side of high, grey clouds and you're hoping that the clouds stay and withhold the rain for just a few minutes longer.

Perhaps everything is thirsty. Either way, a restless dog is not the best hammock companion and so we end up inside, making tea. Varda likes the part where the ice goes into the pitcher because that means several pieces fly her way.

I'm still thinking about how blank the sky is in the backyard. Lying in the hammock, you don't see tree limbs or telephone wires. Just sky upon sky upon sky, above the ridge of fencing.

An empty view of birds and planes (and clouds or bubbles or firecrackers) zinging from one roof or one spot on the map to another. Today, it tastes like water.