Poetry definition

"That's all poetry is, the cry of the coyote on a cold, still night to ears that need to hear."

John Hutchinson

Monday, March 28, 2011

MARCH -- BEGINNING A BAJA ADVENTURE






LIKE CELLS IN A SINGULAR ORGANISM

Packed tight on the plane,
every seat filled,
even the aisle crowded with cart,
somehow
I feel strangely at one
with this bunch –
the bent, elderly oriental woman,
the black with chains hanging from his waist,
the muscle man in tank top and tattoos,
the pert young girl budding her breasts,
the homely woman next to me
munching a bar of dark chocolate,
            even myself.

And, like cells in a singular organism
we swim our way across a common sky
sinking into the sunset.

Sometimes, I wonder why
I avoid, can’t stand, and seek isolation
from this humanly mass. 
Sometimes with a glass of wine
we’re almost tolerable. 

THE GOOD SON

It’s Mother’s birthday, the first one
without her smile, I have
no more wants and very few needs,
and You shouldn’t have.

Now on a plane to LA
and tomorrow another plane to Mexico
to kayak and see whales,
Mother would have approved.
She liked adventure
and took it wherever she could
through the deserts of the Southwest,
the barren hills of the Holy Land,
and across the crowded streets of Europe.

It’s been seven months since her dying
and I smile to recall
her oft repeated travel warnings,
John, don’t drink the water,
watch out for pickpockets,
and be sure
to take all your medications.

Mother, I still hear you!

BAJA, MEXICO (FROM 24,000 FEET)

Brown, wrinkled,
ragged, peaked in white,
coursed by stream beds
long gone dry,
aged, peninsula’d,
surrounded by supple seas
            of leviathans

a land
aching, thirsting
for whatever the gods
            will give

maybe
even love.

FIRST DAY IN LORETO

I was on a roll this early morning
as the sun was up, the skies blue, and the faces
of this Baja desert town friendly. 
On the first person I saw I tried, Hola
and a smile.  It worked.  Walking on, bolder,
I tried, Buenos dias.  That too worked.

I stopped to buy coffee, but didn’t know,
Coffee to go, so tried, Café camino with smile
and that too brought results. 
A merchant washing his sidewalk
nodded to my Buenos dias and gave away
the favor of an agreeable face.

A dusty brown dog gave no notice,
but the time-share salesman did, I’m Felipe
from San Felipe. I’m here to impress you
not depress you.  However, the day brought better
with Mariano the Huichol Indian and his
colorful beads that told the story of his people.

I walked those dusty streets from early
morning through the sleepy afternoon siesta, 
by families eating ice cream and taking
time to smile, and on until the yellowed shadows
of day grew long and my knees
ached for surrender, but not the heart

which found a friend in a small town by the sea. 

OVERHEARD

One day it was, I need to think my thoughts,
not our thoughts.

Then, another time, I’ll talk to you
when your brain comes back.

Ah, the secret joys of eavesdropping.

YEARNING, THIRSTING

Somewhere along the way between Insurgentes
and Lopez Mateos,
on a road that rises and falls in gentle swells
across a brown, desert sea,
and across a parched country of things
that stick and sting

I begin to pay attention to the tall, long-armed
cactus. 

But, it’s not the saguaro with its elbowed arms,
it’s the cardon
standing sentinel tall on this lonely,
arid land
with its long arms reaching
into a blue-eyed sky,
like Adam in the Sistine Chapel painting
yearning for the touch of God

or us thirsting for what we never
quite reach.

Thursday, February 17, 2011

FEBRUARY

NIGHT STEW

Last night I woke at 3:30, didn’t get back
to sleep.
The mind-switch had snapped on.

The invitation to kayak Kedges Strait
threw trauma into my pot,
a perceived slight simmered
with way too much seasoning,
and then other qualms came running,
jumped into the night stew. 

I tried to turn the heat down
with the breath of deep breathing,
gave thought to reading
but didn’t want to turn the light on,
thought too of going downstairs
for a glass of milk (but feared
that too would really wake me),
then offered up prayers
to any god that would listen.

But, by this time
another switch had snapped on
and I crawled out of bed,
walked across the cold, tile floor,
used the bathroom,
returned and saw the green face
of the clock
staring impassively

and knew
this night was cooked. 

BECOMING OTHER

Last night I came, sat in your presence,
listened,
wrote a few lines,
offered a few words,
but it wasn’t
until our voices joined together
in vibrant
harmony of song and chant
that I dissolved

and we
became one.

THE WORK OF QUIET

They say, idle hands are the work of the devil,
but I say, Not always so. 

Busy hands were the ones that wanted, craved,
took, amassed, polluted, bombed.

Go, I say, sit in silence, give those idle hands
to the work of quiet, the one you call God. 



Tuesday, February 1, 2011

MY ISLAND EXPEDITION BELIZE VACATION

THE ARTIST

Coming off the turquoise waters of an Island Expedition kayak trip and arriving back in the seaside town of Dangriga, I sought out a local artist in hopes of finding a colorful street scene painting, maybe making a purchase.  Walking this small town, enjoying the architecture, tropical scenery, and children riding their bicycles, I came upon a small, stucco’d house painted orange with a weathered sign nailed to a post – ARTIST. I knocked, and in time an older black man came, peered out the door of a darkened room. 

I told him my interest and after some hesitation, he said, Come in.  Inside the darkened room my eyes made their adjustment and took in the paintings on the walls, an iron face-down on an ironing board, a doll on a stuffed chair, laundry piled on the sofa, and a hammock that cattycornered the room.

The artist slid under the hammock and from there we continued to talk as the TV played loud music and black birthday faces rolled across the screen. I asked if we could sit and he moved to the stuffed chair with the doll and I crossed under the boundary of the hammock to the sofa and sat with the laundry. Then, he began: 

He talked about a young boy who learned to paint with house paints and make-do brushes, a young man who was given a scholarship to attend an art school in the United States, and about a man whose paintings traveled to England with the president of Belize and some mention of an award from the queen.  He talked about the older man who painted his parents that now stared down at us as if they had just entered the room.  Then, turning to a painting on the wall, he gave a longing smile at a young woman in the bright colors of a sunny day, laundry waving in a breeze on a clothesline, and children at play.

Then the artist invited me into his studio where a board on a bucket served as a pallet and unfinished paintings leaned against every wall.  He said he had trouble now, and at age 76 he didn’t know what was wrong.  He shuffled across the room, picked up a paint brush, held it out in front of him to show the tremor that took over his hand.  He said he just didn’t know when he’d ever finish all these paintings. 

Almost forgetting the purpose of my visit, I finally asked if he had anything for sale.  One was ready, he said, for 1500 Belizean dollars, but then he smiled and said he already knew that was too much for my pocketbook.  I smiled back to the truth of that and brought our conversation to a close.  Then, in his slow shuffle he led me out of the studio, back under the hammock of the darkened room, and out on the front porch where we said goodbye under the glare of an early morning Belizean sun.

Months later back home in Baltimore and out of curiosity, I decided to google the name of the artist I met in Dangriga.  The results brought a slow smile to my face. Benjamin Nicholas never mentioned his paintings, the ones housed in the Smithsonian and in museums all over the world.  


Want to get some sun, warm weather, do a little kayaking, and have a neat vacation experience?  Try -- http://www.islandexpeditions.com/  

Thursday, January 13, 2011

MEXICO IN JANUARY

ROSY’S

There was no door,
just a green gate swung open for the day,
an open courtyard,
a roof covered by thatch,
four tables of plastic,
as well the chairs and tablecloths too,
a gray cat curled by the wall,
a brown dog wandered through,
a round brown woman cooked
with skillet, stove, and reluctant smile,
a blind boy hummed, head-bobbed
to CD’d Christmas carols,
a pony-tailed Mexican nodded
for a third bottle of wine,
Rosy in tight sequined jeans and loose white blouse
smiled, moved to the music of this moment. 
 
Rice, eggs, beans

a feast,
this warm January day.


JUST A STORY
(For Elizabeth Walter)

I didn’t sleep well last night.  It was warm, muggy.

Was reading a murder-mystery and caught
in a never ending drama,
and couldn’t let go
to fall
into that place called sleep.

Then I thought, it’s just a book,
just a story,
like any other story,  
yours or mine,
filled perhaps with love, loss, lust, 
remorse, guilt,
anger, doubt,
confusion or maybe hurt,
a story wrapped in the condition
called human,
a story as old as the ages.

Only the actors change  


TROPICAL AFTERNOON


Her face
fell from the fronds of the palm.
His fingers
trembled to unbutton the blouse.

The boat under sail
slid through the opening in the reef,
rose high on the mounting swells of the sea,
fell hungry upon the horizon,
and the tropical bird
shrieked from the throat of longing
as the stilled iguana
stared warmth into the sun.