Winter Rain

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Dance between rain drops
Luminous mist warms the snow
Pointe-shoe peppered melody
Subdues lament halo

By: Slowmoto

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Prosopon

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Layering fog
challenge crusade to lasso thoughts
Sweeping plumes of tumbleweed memories
fold as worn paper
Nestling mismatched boxes
spin hair ribbons tight

Bulwark

Photo by Slowmoto, Scott's Farm, Sept 2012

photo by Slowmoto, All Rights Reserved

Cloaked dynamo

Cede temperamental terrain

Casting solitude

Silent Release

Painting by Slowmoto

Scrutinizing a relic’s heyday

Plummeting from lulling sway

Security abandoned to journey on

Earth’s trembling harmonic song

Escaping Dew


The roadblock loomed beyond lost destiny

Unrelenting theories believed even as startled free

The wings snipped beckoned the jailer’s need

 

 Undeterred hero challenged the before

Dismantled the cage, each brick, each word

Tenderly mended the qualm to soar

 

Deep within, a hope that you are high and proud

As the predestined rejection did not impound

An escaping flight beyond a darkened cloud

Boarder – Free Verse

Survive a clouted heart?

                                         Build another chamber.

     Allow another tenant?

                                               When choosing; be wiser.

Slow Saunter

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Disregard chatter

Meant to torment frailty

Disquieting rust

Implacable Fury

 

Earth’s fiery force

Excavates media fossil

Fuels refresh pandemic fever

Shares blazing snowflake-edged scene

Fervid centennial flurry 

Links:

Fire of 1912  http://jeff560.tripod.com/fire.html

Fire of 2012 http://www.register-herald.com/todaysfrontpage/x1818106025/Major-fire-destroys-downtown-Beckley-buildings

Haiku – Seeking Arroyo Borealis

Seeking Arroyo Borealis

Establish tumble

Derail overgrown silence

Vitalize chaos

Chimera

Chimera

Thought bends color spawning an image

Paint into existence?

Trepidation endows emptiness

As fear maintains a clean brush

Joseph’s Army

Slush shadows master

Frozen eyes halt abrupt veer

Blackened ice cracking

David’s Hiaku

For David:

Whispers patchwork carol 

Laughter foams from frosted glass

Christmas ember breathes

Thank you.

Harvesting Tinsel


The boys have pitched into a melodic chatter

Mr Abshner called and boasted the thirteen foot tree to be even fatter
Present you weren’t for the first, the second, and now, with the third tree
being delivered. 

The first year without your presence
I avoided a tree but the boys shattered resistance
With a small bit of money, to the tree lot we went
We lost Samuel for a second, deep in the truck he slipped
He pointed to the largest tree, set off to the side
Protest I started, with a heavy sigh
but Mr Abshner sternly resolved,
he only dealt with the son of five years old
Samuel showed him the money
Joseph grinned with wonder
I proclaimed the ceilings of eight feet only
Mr Abshner exclaimed that he would deliver and trim the tree to sit
The lopsided tree was rejected by the church and his daughter, seemingly unfit.

I sat on my stairway waited and thought
The tree even a lopsided one would be disgraced if cut
The foyer was tall enough, but yet too skinny
Unless you preference entry by window or chimney
I looked outside and decided under the front porch atrium was best
The neighbors would relish the evidence that I had one brick less
Mr Abshner and I heaved the tree up
When a streak of green and a groan emerged from atrium top.
The tree was too tall, I almost admitted defeat
Then I rallied onto the lawn not to be beat
So we wrestled the tree up to the outside of our house
Secured it with rachets, tie downs and straps
We harvested the other outside decorations to adorn our tree
The three of us with a tender friend gathered on the lawn and beamed.

Our oldest said softly, words, carefully chosen:
“Now Daddy can look down, and see, our Christmas Tree from heaven.” 

Beneath Bended Tree

Tethered moccasins berated into silent agony

Sheltered by warmed instant coffee and shortbread cookies

Insomnia

Silhouette adorned with tailored silver slippers

Shared an orange marmalade confection dressed in apple blossoms

Wakeful Bliss

Stocking feet planted on black leather shoes

Offered a raisin cake from a dusty dinner pail

Dreamcatcher

Walking Past

 

 

 

Stagnation weeps history

Thankful for dawn beyond darkness

Find your tear in the ocean

Whims challenge destiny

Thankful to you

My tear rescued in your hand

Haiku for Little One

Still child tend an ear

Dances as midnight slips to dawn

Sing the melody

Cracking Ice

Slowmoto’s Haiku 

 

 Insulting remark

A reactive thunder sounds

Astonishing me

Poetry by: Slowmoto  

Slippery Ice

Poetry by:  Slowmoto

Beyond consciousness

Privy of feeling and thought

Easily anonymous

Awareness lost

Sharing anger, grief, fear, and pain

Unknown reader overlooks their name

Absent of passion to intervene

Connection unsought

Humanity lost

Click past without remorse 

A little piece of ice

Free Verse:


We are defined by DNA

We are shaped by experiences

We are remembered by our hearts

Poetry by:  Slowmoto

Standing Room Only

"There comes a time in your life, when you walk away from all the drama and people who create it. You surround yourself with people who make you laugh. Forget the bad, and focus on the good. Love the people who treat you right, pray for the ones who don't. Life is too short to be anything but happy. Falling down is a part of life, getting back up is living." Posted by Brian B. Hornsby;

I remain standing, slightly embarrassed, that I no longer crumble from grief.   Today, your younger son, told his joke for a third time, laughing (your laugh) as hard as the first telling,  while slapping his knee when revealing the punchline, just as you.  My heart pained but steadied and allowed myself a chuckle.  The tears that flowed, without resistance, to mere similarities, remained contained.  Even yesterday, as I encountered your passion for pushing boundaries, (specifically, an attack on gravity,)  I spied your mischievous spirit as the older, armed the younger, with a parachute (tablecloth) and a plan to jump from the neighbor’s oak tree.  Yes, I intervened.  And no, even though submerged in sorrow, I didn’t fall.

Today, the younger,  hunted his gifts for a puppy and tears spilled from your blue eyes while he sputtered that it was all he wanted for his birthday.   The older,  eased the younger’s grief  (peacemaker like me), explaining “only Santa brings puppies as presents not Mommeys!”

I continue to stand even as I see your expressions overwritten.  Again I ponder, “why?”  but without succumbing to the crippling grief and guilt…I can stand.

Walking in another’s shoes

cancer 2011

Image by mike r baker via Flickr

Today, I had the honor to walk in another’s shoes.  When my friend reads this blog he will assume I mean his mother’s shoes, but in reality, I mean his.  I saw his grief, his loss through his eyes while reading her diary depicting her love of life and her efforts to continue as a wife, a mother, grandmother, a believer in her faith, and a servant to God. I am so consumed in my grief and guilt that I am unaware of people experiencing the same.  It wasn’t until I read her words that I realized the debilitating pain my friend must feel when he hears the chorus of his mother’s favorite hymn (\”Father I Adore You\”)  or aches to feel her words near when worried or frightened.   The journey accepting grief as a companion (because I am never without its presence) is a fluctuating road of upheavals and detours.  I realize that when he reads her words he is searching to find passages that prove she knew that he loved her, and to find comfort in her words of her love of him. As I read her decisions whether to keep her children “in the loop” or “waiting to tell” so not to burden them, I sensed the anxiety of her son reliving conversations, actions, decisions that prevented him from being near and felt his anger at not knowing that she needed help. I felt his anguish as his mother praised nurses and doctors while worrying if she looked ill or smelled scented of cancer. I re-read her first paragraph, her first point, that she didn’t appreciate the complexity of care required by her mother’s breast cancer and that she was never more involved than, “how are you feeling?” I wondered if she was angry or relieved that her mother had sheltered her and wondered, due to her experience, if she purposely sheltered her children from the same. I was in awe of her husband as his devotion never faltered.  In her words I saw his love.  A couple bonded by love is as comfortable during a crisis (even a crisis unabated) as working a crossword together watching the earth cover itself in snow.  I have witnessed stress causing estranged marriages to reunite that would later falter in times of peace; strong marriages crumble in a life changing event that never recover; and the beauty of marriage when defined and nurtured by spouses truly in love, that steadies during upheavals and flourishes on rainy days. I read her words, and appreciated the love and friendship of her family while sensing the void when she passed and the mixture of feelings: anger, grief, relief, and guilt as they felt her slip from their fingers… leaving an abyss you try to skirt around when being hammered with kind words and sentiments, but treasure when needing that grief, pain, to knock away the numbness and allow the tears to fall.

To walk in another’s shoes, is humbling as I realize that my grief is not unique.

The other quiet booming experience of grief is the guilt of surviving.  The guilt of moving forward.  There is an imaginary line that keeps tune with your summations of life, in my friend’s reality I am positive he has thought “my mother knew my daughter but never met my son…he will never feel the love she has for him.”  Yet, I interject here, my friend,  you have spoken often of your son’s grandmother’s love that by witnessing your admiration of her, your son feels the same.  Funny, in some situations (as I can refer to my own and others known to me) the passing of a spouse or parent can, in time, allow any pain or hurtful memory to conjugate at the bottom of your emotional tower and allow only the stories of good deeds and joyful memories to rise and spill from the window at the top with increasing increments of greatness as the memory is left unbounded to color the landscape of those unknown.  Is this how one becomes a martyr?  Is this how the survivor counters the burden of moving forward?  I am not sure, as I read her diary I thought of those “after her”  having to acknowledge the imaginary line in tune with the surviving family constantly sorting this occurred before her death and this after. How hard to tiptoe around the greatness of the loved one passed, to finally stumble into her favorite chair causing streaks of horror to emanate from the surviving members, one must surpass the urge to run beyond the boundaries of the line and defiantly stay seated, or the desire to retreat from the family while entertaining thoughts of not returning.  I believe the hero is the one that stands acknowledging the line and says, “pardon me, I didn’t know someone was sitting here.”   After time, and many acknowledgments of inanimate objects, favorite restaurants, and the missing member at family gatherings, the quiet awkward moments become opportunities to let a  memory or story slip out of the tower to color the landscape of those unknown canvases allowing the greatness presence as the family moves forward.

As I read her last entry, imagining an existence without pain, I hope she is aware of her status of hero to those she knew, those arriving after, and those touched by her words of life and family.

Token Unneeded

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Hurled bullet ricochets 

Need no reminding 

A flimsy peace 

Leave mending pieces

Refined Graffiti

Free Verse by Slowmoto

Serenity of heaven’s peace

Husband beamed

Embraced captured piece

Realizing a prideful dream

Slow Saunter

Image

Disregard chatter

Meant to torment frailty

Disquieting rust

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