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Monday, February 2, 2026

Seeking Shelter


Seeking Shelter

I write in a trance today.
My heart isn’t in it,
yet I continue—
wondering why, and for how long.

I look for a place to shelter
from the evils of the world--
somewhere to burrow,
a little calm for my anxious heart.

I play the New York Times Wordle,
a small, clever escape,
a workout for the mind—
though the news still always finds me.

I play with my dog,
look into her deep eyes,
so dependent, so innocent.
Her warmth steadies me.

I find shelter in plans,
in dreams that may not happen—
to visit Copenhagen again,
the quiet utopia of my soul.

Written for my prompt at What's Going On? -- "Shelter"


Tuesday, January 27, 2026

A Hurting Heart



A Hurting Heart

Sometimes there is
no help for a hurting heart
except to look away for a time
read a book, go to the gym,

take a walk, cuddle a dog,
watch a series on TV,
play a word game with friends.
bake banana bread, write a poem,

take a nap, organize a drawer,
eat ice cream, listen to music.
These are some simple ways
to help a hurting heart.

For Sherry's prompt at What's Going On:  Help for Hurting Hearts

Monday, January 19, 2026

Peace

 




 Photos With Permission of Photographer

Peace

They walk the long road
from Texas to Washington,
robes and sandals,
nothing extra.

Their lives are simple.
Purposeful—
resolved.

Day after day they walk.

I imagine myself beside them,
learning how to move
without urgency,
without rage
without fear
without anxiety.

Aloka walks with them,
nose to the ground,
heart untroubled
by flags or slogans
or evil intentions.
He loves the road
because it is there.

I want to be
like Aloka.

These days
my heart is loud
with politics,
disbelief, anger,
fear.

I cannot settle safely.
I want another way.

Peace, maybe,
is not silence
but choosing
where to place each foot.

One step.
Another.
Leaving something behind.


For Susan's prompt at What's Going On:  "Peace"


Monday, January 12, 2026

New Beginning




New Beginning

New year
new beginning
fresh hopes
spring is just over the hill
and once again
grass will green
flowers will bloom
birds will sing
there will be reason for
smiles

Written for Sumana's prompt at What's Going On? -- "A New Beginning"

Monday, January 5, 2026

Letting Go




Letting Go

Letting go
is not one clean motion.
It is a slow unfastening,
fingers loosening
around what once felt permanent.

We began at the bank,
adjoining teller windows,
passing jokes along as
we passed out cash,
a summer for me,
a life for him.

Later there were meals,
bars where the floor throbbed under our feet,
music loud enough
to make the future seem distant.
We talked until closing time,
until words felt endless.

Time moved us apart
without breaking our connection.
Letters replaced laughter,
cards stood in for voices.
Holidays, birthdays—
news folded neatly inside envelopes
never an occasion missed.

Then silence arrived
without explanation.
A fall.
A nursing home with no name.
A card unanswered.

Letting go
began as worry,
then became absence.

The news came sideways,
through a message,
through someone else’s grief.
I wanted one last sentence,
one more sound of his voice,
something unfinished to finish.

There was kindness after—
a brother’s call,
a small book returned,
my younger handwriting still held
in his keeping.

Letting go means
holding that tenderness
without trying to reclaim it.
It means letting gratitude
stand where loss wants to scream.

I remember the guitar,
the pranks,
the dancing,
but mostly the long talks—
how time once seemed like infinity to us.

Now I practice releasing
the future I didn't know had passed:
no more cards,
no more news,
no voice on the other end.

Letting go
is allowing the love to stay
while accepting the goodbye.



Written for my prompt at What's Going On?  -- "Letting Go"

Monday, December 29, 2025

The Last Things I Remember


The Last Things I'll Remember

The backyard lawn where I would lie out in the sun to tan,
with a book in my hand, a transistor radio blaring the
popular songs of the day, the warmth, slight breeze, summer

The clothesline, filled with sheets, towels, shirts, underwear,
pajamas, drying all day in the warm sun, bleaching, the smell
of fresh air baked into them, so crisp and clean, blowing.

The petunias and geraniums, my mother knees on the ground,
hands in the earth, planting and caring for them, weeds did 
not have a chance, watered with care, tended with love.

The lawnmowers, first a hand mower, my dad pushing,
then a power mower, orange, easier to use, sometimes I
would mow the lawn then, work I thought was fun.

The smell of leaves burning in fall, my dad made a
fire in fall, the flames dancing, the smell pungent, sky
dark overhead, my dad standing watch with a rake.

The front porch, sitting out on a warm summer night,
talking to neighbors who walked by, playing starlight
moonlight, watching fireflies dance, under the moon.


For Sherry's prompt at What's Going On? -- "The Last Things I Remember"

Tuesday, December 23, 2025

Twilight



photo taken by me

Twilight

Twilight.
Between day
and night.

Life moves the same way:
childhood,
youth,
adulthood,
and then this—
late adulthood,
the hour before dark.

This is where I am:
late twilight.
Wine in hand.
The sun easing down.
Still active.
Still tasting joy.
Still aware
the light is thinning.

Twilight is not night,
but it knows night is coming.
There is no stopping it,
no bargaining
with the horizon.

So—
cheese with the wine.
A quiet toast.
Not surrender,
but acknowledgment
of the dark ahead.

Written for Susan's prompt "Twilight" at What's Going On?




Sunday, December 14, 2025

Silence




 Silence

Silence welcomes me home—
at last  my tired feet are up,
tea is warm in my hands.

Silence unsettles
when calls go unanswered,
when texts are not responded to.

Silence stings and hurts
when I speak to someone
and nothing comes back.

Silence deepens on Christmas Eve—
distant church bells drifting,
the world celebrates a birth.

Silence troubles me
when harm spreads
and so many say nothing.

Silence becomes worship
when I pause in stillness,
and offer thanks without words.

Silence settles at bedtime,
the noise of daytime  fading,
rest finally near.


This is written for Sumana's prompt "Silence" at What's Going On?







Monday, December 8, 2025

Two Poems on Loneliness


The Season Everyone Smiles Through

December arrives with its scripted cheer,
lights strung across streets and windows
decorations on doors and in yards
as if brightness alone could lift the heaviness
that settles this time of year.

I walk through stores where music insists
on joy I can’t find a way to feel,
its cheerfulness brushes against me
like a stranger who assumes we’re friends.
Everyone seems to be performing—
laughing a little too loudly,
talking about plans as though the season
still carries the magic it once did.

All around I see a hollow imitation—
ornaments hung because they always have been,
traditions kept out of habit rather than wonder.
I feel myself going through the motions,
as if the holiday is a play and I’m reciting lines
that no longer fit my mouth.

Sometimes I look at others
and wonder if they’re acting too,
if they have that same quiet thoughts,
that same suspicion that the season
has become something to endure
rather than celebrate.
But we all smile for photos,
wrap gifts and sing traditional songs,
and I can’t tell if I am the only one
who hears the silence beneath all the music.

I tell myself it’s just another year,
that I’ll step through it as I always do
like a doorway I didn’t choose—
but still must pass through—
hoping, without expecting,
that some small flicker might return
and I will feel real and alive again.


What's Missing?

In a crowded room, voices hum like bees,
words weaving around me, never through me.
I stand among others with a cup in my hand,
wondering how to enter a conversation
when nothing in me seems to match its flow.

Laughter rises, familiar and distant,
and I nod, smile, drift away in my mind—
a person among people, yet invisible—
hoping I at least look engaged
feeling the awkward quiet settle inside.


Written for my prompt at What's Going On? -- Lonely


Monday, December 1, 2025

Resistance

 


Resistance

Resistance begins with a quiet mind
that rejects the media’s portrayals,
what they call truth (and isn’t),
simply refusing their story.

Resistance holds strong against despair,
enduring the flood of horrors
heard about each day,
with teeth clenched, arms folded.

Resistance pushes back against hopelessness,
eyes fixed on a flickering flame of hope.
It stands firm against giving up,
though some days make that hard.

Resistance looks toward an ending not yet visible,
noticing hairline cracks in the regime,
hoping the foundation will give way
while praying for a new dawn.

Written for Sherry's prompt at What's Going On? -- Resistance


Monday, November 24, 2025

Courage



Courage

Courage is a small thing
like going to work every day
when one is brown
and ICE is all around

Courage is a small thing
like standing near schools
with whistles to blow to warn
if ICE comes to call.

Courage is a small thing
like writing/speaking the truth
when so many bend the knee
rather than exposing lies.

Courage is being a survivor
and standing up proudly
demanding files be released
seeking justice.

Courage is six veterans
in Congress making a video 
explaining that service people
should not follow illegal orders.

Courage is doing something
either big or small 
even if only inside one's mind
which says I resist.

*******

Written for Susan's prompt at What's Going On:  Words of Fearlessness or Courage

Monday, November 17, 2025

Alive


Alive

Sunlight spills through the forest,
Olive trots ahead, ecstatic,
the air full of pine and impending winter.

Red and gold of colorful autumn,
and then a sudden hush of snow,
the earth shifts its colors again.

Alive!

The highway winds ahead of me,
loud music fills my car,
and I sing my favorite songs.

A table  bright with what’s fresh,
tomatoes, berries, melon, bread,
and to drink - turmeric ginger tea.

Alive

A novel captures my mind,
pages turn one after another,
I am immersed in a new world.

An engrossing conversation drifts
from laughter to serious discussion,
the gathering leaves warmth behind.

Alive!

Each small, full moment
reminds me I am here,
breathing, awake, alert ---

ALIVE!

For Sumana's prompt for What's Going On?  -- What Makes You Feel Alive?

Monday, November 10, 2025

Black


Black

At first, it’s only the absence—
then the presence begins to breathe.
Sometimes rage, sometimes sadness,
the darkness of a black hole.

Wind tears the night apart;
sky turns heavy, metallic,
the color of fury before it breaks
as the world fades to dark.

In a room a dress hangs
between celebration and mourning.
the color that expresses everything—
formality, the grief, or perhaps
intentional understatement.

The unnamed man who would be king
keeps it in his chest like a weapon,
the darkness of a narcissistic soul.
He calls it vision,
but it stinks of rancid smoke
and pollutes the atmosphere.

There is sweetness as well --
a strand of licorice pulled between teeth,
melting slowly, coating the tongue,
staining the teeth,
bitterness covered with sugar
delicious.

My dog’s nose—
cool, shining—
presses into my palm,
as if to remind me
with her soulful ebony eyes
that darkness can love, too.

For my prompt at What's Going On? -- "Black or White"



Tuesday, November 4, 2025

Little Squirrel


source

Little Squirrel

Little squirrel,
you scamper on the pavement
scamper in the yard,
dash through the colorful leaves.

What are you doing, little fella,
in this month of the year
(no longer summer
but not yet winter)?
Are you still burying nuts
or are you finding those
that you already buried?

Perhaps you are just enjoying
a frolic for pleasure
like I do, as I walk my dog
who finds you quite intriguing
and would like to chase you,
as she chases the leaves,
until you are both tired.

I wonder, scampering friend, 
what my dog would do with you
if she caught you--
but worry not, little squirrel.
I will protect you from harm
(and not let her loose)
as you go about your business
of living freely and happily
in this world we all share.


This was written for Sherry's post at What's Going On? -- Kinship

Tuesday, October 28, 2025

What I Used to Know

source


What I Used to Know

I used to think I knew
there was an eternity—
a place without end,
a promise beyond the turning of years.

But those days are gone.
Now I wake to smaller hopes,
to mornings that ask only
that I make it through.

I no longer plan far ahead.
Next month feels like fog,
next year like a myth.

If forever exists,
I wonder what waits there—
who will be gathered,
who left behind,
and whether I will still
recognize myself.

There is so much to fear,
so much cruelty walking the earth.
If eternity is real,
let it not carry
the shadows of this world.

For now,
I keep my faith
no further than the sunrise,
and call it enough.

--------

For Susan's prompt at What's Going On? -- "Eternal/Unchanging"


Tuesday, October 21, 2025

The Time of Covid



The Time of Covid

The book I tried to read, monotony
washing clothes, an order for pickup
a quick walk with the dog, gray skies
gray mind, new gray corduroy pants
sameness, stillness, frustration

impatience, writing, Netflix
deleting emails, covid cases climb
housebound, mask-bound, boosted
bitter cold, bitter mind, biting my tongue
people dying, democracy dying, loss of faith

the chilling cold, the boredom of the day
sameness of the day, same old same old
sadness, deeper, longer, bleaker
no respite, no escape, no change
the book I failed to read, monotony.

****


A Short Addendum

2022 peaceful times
Cocooned in my home
trapped but somewhat safe

Only today mattered
tomorrow was a question
would fear ever end?

2025 when I write this
tomorrow is still a question
will fear ever end?


For my prompt at What's Going On? -- "The Days We Stayed Apart"

Tuesday, October 14, 2025

The Quiet Watchers

 



The Quiet Watchers

Two small sentinels on the back of a couch,
Their ears like sails, catching every sound—
Eyes glimmering with a gentle question,
As if they know something I don’t.
Sunlight slants across their coats,
Black and white like ink on parchment,
Still and soft, yet so awake. Alive!

Behind them, blossoms fall silently.
Petals paused in their pink descent—
A world in bloom, framed by the glass
As life unfolds just out of reach.
The room hums with a hush
Only the heart can hear.

And now, they are gone.
Their warmth only memory
Their gaze now immortal
In this canvas of stillness.
The artist too has stepped
Beyond the edge of the frame,
Brush laid down, breath stilled,
Leaving me this moment captured.

I stand here now,
Looking at the ones
Who once watched me
with their intense eyes...
And shed a quiet tear.

O brief lives,
O bright sparks,
O joy curled in small bodies—
You remind me:
The couch was your throne,
The day was once infinity,
And life… a quiet, beautiful blink.

So let's love now, live now, 
Sit in the sun while we can.
Watch the world bloom.
And when the moment comes,
That we too must leave, 
Let it come gently,
Like this.

An Ekphrastic poem for Sumana's prompt at "What's Going On?"

(This poem is about the painting of my beloved pets Tulip (my heart dog) and Violet (my first toy fox terrier) done by commission by Tasmanian artist Nyra Aherne. Both the dogs and the artist are deceased. The picture hangs in my living room.)

Monday, October 6, 2025

In the Forest

 

In the Forest

In the forest, Jane listened—
every leaf, every call a lesson.
She said the world is never empty,
only waiting for eyes to see.
Her life: to save Mother Nature,
and teach us to care,
so no heart grows bored or blind.

For Sherry's prompt at What's Going On?  -- "A Message from Jane Goodall"



Monday, September 29, 2025

So Tired


source


So Tired

I am so tired of
the news
the evil
the hatred
the lies
the greed
the uncaring
the intimidation
the suffering
the fear
of what will
happen tomorrow.

****

Written for Susan's prompt at What's Going On? -- "Weariness"


Tuesday, September 23, 2025

Simple as That

Olive with her beloved Lambchop
 

Simple as That

Dog has her treasure
a simple one
that makes her happy

Lambchop is her
prized possession
she keeps it near

Happiness is often
simple as that!


Written for Sumana's prompt at What's Going On? -- Creating an Image

Monday, September 15, 2025

My White Treasure

 


My White Treasure


In pristine white, you gleam and shine,
dear Honda CRV, you're mine.
No car before has claimed my heart
the way you have, right from the start.

I park you far from crowded spaces,
protect you from scratches and traces.
Every two weeks, a careful wash,
your spotless beauty makes me gush.

I vacuum your mats with gentle care,
and dust your dashboard everywhere.
White like fresh snow, pure and bright,
you fill my drives with such delight.

Your backup camera guides my way
(I'm terrible at reverse, I'll say).
Your heated seats take away winter's chill,
the steering wheel, warmer still.

Through Apple Maps, we find our way,
while music plays—different each day--
melodies through your speakers clear,
or podcasts that I love to hear.

Of all the cars I've loved before,
you've opened up a special door.
My hybrid treasure, white and true,
there's never been a car like you.

Monday, September 8, 2025

Two Short Poems About Women's Rights


Source


Two Short Poems About Women's Rights

#1

Consciousness raising group
What a new concept
Had to check it out
I was shy though
Didn't like to talk in groups
But I bravely gave it a try

I forget how many women
All strangers to me
So many shared their soul
Stories of sexual assault
I would never have guessed
I had no stories to add.

But the group empowered me
Women had a voice
Women had a choice
Women were not 'girls'
Women could rise up
Women could be strong.

--------------

#2

She hated that restroom signs
were labelled 'men' for men
and 'ladies' for women.
I never would have noticed that
but once I noticed I could not unsee.
And still to this day I notice
which word public restrooms use.
She fantasized removing the 'ladies' signs
I told her to bring a screwdriver
I told her I would keep watch.
She never did, is dead now,
but even forty years later
I still check restroom signage
and still think of her.

---------------


Written for Sherry's prompt at What's Going On -- "Women's Rights Then and Now." 

Tuesday, September 2, 2025

You are Allowed to Love

 


source


You are Allowed to Love

You are allowed to love your body, as it is today.  Not as taut as it once was.  Even the parts that you don't like to see in the mirror.  The wrinkles on your face and the flabby skin of your upper arms and legs and ass that you purposely don't choose to view.  Your wrinkled hands.  

Your body has lived a good life, still is.  There is nothing not to love.  Nothing to hide.  No shame. Your life today is a gift as it always has been.  You are beautiful just as you are.  Look at yourself in the mirror and smile.  You are allowed to love your body.


For Susan's prompt at What's Going On? -- Mirrors





Tuesday, August 26, 2025

Dividing Lines

 

Dividing Lines

We draw our circles smaller and smaller,
marking territory with invisible fences—
red versus blue, young versus old,
family member versus family member,
us versus them in endless variation.

The space between grows wider
while we shout across the chasm
words that never bridge the distance,
only echo back distorted.
or are unheard at all.

What we lose in the gap:
the neighbor who might have helped
carry groceries to the car,
a friend we might have made,
the conversation that could have
shifted everything slightly toward light.

Each wall we build
makes the world smaller,
makes us smaller,
until we forget
we all bleed the same red blood,
all need the same sun,
all breathe the same air,
all break and heal
in remarkably similar ways
all are looking for love.

The rifts we tend
become the graves
we dig for understanding,
burying what we might have learned,
keeping our differences alive,
and sometimes we wonder
if there is a possibility for change..

For Sumana's prompt at What's Going On? -- Rift.

Tuesday, August 19, 2025

The Red Canoe Cap

 


The Red Canoe Cap Surrounded By Its "Siblings"


The Red Canoe Cap

In a Toronto shop window,
something yellow gold caught my eye—
above the brim a Red Canoe maple leaf
a simple baseball cap that promised
to hold more than just my wandering hair.

Three reasons pulled me toward the counter:
souvenir search, that tourist ache
for something interesting to carry home,
the honest pleasure of liking what I saw,

and most urgently, a practical way
to tame  the rebellious hair on my head.
I pulled the strap tight,
adjusted the fit until it held
my head like a second skin,
snug enough to defy
the conspiracy of wind and weather.

Since then, it has been my faithful companion—
across the Atlantic to Stockholm's cobblestones,
through Copenhagen's bicycle-lined streets,
along the beautiful lake shores of Door County.

This one hat has by now been joined by siblings:
such as Mads Nørgaardcaps from in different hues,
a growing family of cotton crowns
to match my moods and clothes,
a family of colorful brims standing guard
against the chaos above my ears.

What began as practicality
became my signature,
this curved shield that crowns me
wherever I go.

People know me now as
the woman who wears her caps,
but most do not know they are
not so much fashion as necessity,

as if my very thoughts
might scatter in the wind
without this simple anchor
keeping everything in place.

Written for "What's Going On" -- The Stories We Wear



Sunday, August 10, 2025

A Few Things About Love

 

A Few Things About Love

I used to think that when love was over it was gone,
but that is wrong, wrong wrong.  Sometimes it resurfaces
at the strangest moments when you read an obituary
and find they died of cancer and you didn't even know,

or you discover they have died and you thought, of course,
an illness, but then you read it was suicide at a railroad
crossing you know well,  and you can't get that image
out of your mind.  And then you think of another who 

died of a lingering illness, and you watched firsthand
the deterioration month by month, day by day, lived with it. 
But that death at least was understandable and relatable
because all was visible and you knew, yes you knew, 

where the path would lead. Lately I cannot get death
out of my mind but know that even when love is past tense
it is never gone, and no matter how many years pass,
painful thoughts and memories will still surface in dreams.

Other times they appear in happy dreams, carefree and relaxed,
music playing loudly as we drive, hair blowing in the breeze, 
and I try to imagine that where they are on the other side
they have good dreams of me sometime,  and I smile.

****

(Please do me a favor..watch the video above.  I don't see how anyone could watch it and not identify with it in some way.)

*****

For Sherry's prompt at What's Going On? -- "Love Letter from the Afterlife."

Tuesday, August 5, 2025

Long Distance

 

Olive

Long Distance

We don’t share the same hometown anymore,
but I still reach for your voice—
crossing miles
that feel like moons and years.

You ask the same questions each time:
Any travel plans?
What book are you reading?
Anything new?

I answer again.
I mention a trip—
you won’t remember.
I name a book—
you write it down,
but won’t read it.

We reminisce sometimes—
about childhood,
about those years working at the same school.
Those talks feel like solid ground.

I tell you Olive stories.
You love them.
That makes me smile too.

Your laughter,
still bright, still certain,
makes the forgetting bearable.

So I call.
And I will keep calling.

Written for Susan's prompt "A Weekend With Friends" at What's Going On?


Tuesday, July 29, 2025

Questions

 



Questions

I was asked:
Why do you write so many poems
when no one sees you and all your hard work?

And I answer:  Because the words found me, 
and I have to listen
What else am I to do?

I was asked:
But is there a bigger purpose than that?

And I answer: Because the sun is shining,
because everything grows.
What else am I to do?

I was asked: Do you really know anything
that important to share?

And I answer:  I know nothing.


For Sumana's prompt at What's Going On? -- Open Link


Monday, July 21, 2025

In These Uncertain Times




In These Uncertain Times

When the  ground shifts beneath us, 
when news breaks like glass, sharp and endless,
we scroll  through our phones continually, hoping,
chasing answers that will change by morning.

Though the world feels so fractured,
the sun never forgets to rise,
even when no one is watching.
Branches continue to reach for light.

And even as we think about our life—
a friend's laughter breaks the silence,
trees and grass keep greening after rain,
a cup of tea warms the hands like a promise.

We anchor ourselves in what endures:
the simple things, the special moments
kindness, breath, love, trust, faith, hope
the quiet hope that this is not the end.


Written for my prompt for What's Going On? -- "In These Uncertain Times"

Tuesday, July 15, 2025

What It Means to Be Human

 





What It Means to Be Human

To wake each morning carrying yesterday's weight
and tomorrow's uncertainty,
to feel the pull of gravity in your mind
but celebrate the laughter in your heart.

We are the species that weeps at sunsets
then destroys the forests that create them,
who build cathedrals to honor the divine
then fight wars over whose god is real.

We are capable of unspeakable cruelty—
The deliberate wound, imprisonment of the innocent,
the way we can make and idolize monsters
created from our darkest reflections.

Yet watch us in our grocery stores,
strangers helping strangers reach the high shelf,
or see how we stop our cars
for a funeral procession of people we'll never know.

We are the only creatures who know we will die
and spend our lives forgetting it,
who can imagine tomorrow
and be paralyzed by its possibilities.

We are walking contradictions—
selfish and selfless,
wise and foolish,
creators and destroyers,

always becoming,
never quite arriving,
magnificently, tragically,
sometimes gloriously human.

For Sherry's prompt at What's Going On? ---  "Being Human."