Showing posts with label poetry. Show all posts
Showing posts with label poetry. Show all posts

Friday, October 14, 2011

Stawberry Story: Hope for the Flowers

Ellie and I just finished reading this one, a treasure my mom shared with me when I was young.  Such powerful messages at any age.

Hope for the Flowers by Trina Paulus

The book follows the travels and transformation of two caterpillars, Yellow and Stripe.  Stripe is on a mission to figure out the meaning of life when he stumbles upon a pillar of caterpillars.  There must be something at the top, he figures and starts to climb.  Along the way he steps on Yellow and finds sympathy in his heart.  The descend and travel together until the call of the pillar is too strong and they part ways.

They meet...
....they frolic....

...they part...
....caterpillar bliss!

It's much, much more than a love story.  Anytime I'm waiting in a ridiculous line or fighting to get ahead I wonder: am I just in the middle of a catapillar pillar?

The truth behind the pillar is later revealed... (spoiler altert!)

BAAAAHHHH!!!!!  Caterpillar pillars everywhere!

I should post this on my mirror.
PS...If I ever got a tattoo, it would be Yellow and Stripe as caterpillars on one ankle and then them again as butterflies together on the opposite shoulder. 

Visit the authors website: http://www.hopefortheflowers.org/

Monday, October 10, 2011

When She Smiles

Mom at the Matterhorn.

When she smiles,

the patch covering the hole
that cancer made where her right eye
used to be,

lifts and I can see the hole
while I am trying to eat dinner,
I am polite and swallow small bies

as I try to flow with her frenetic energy,
her passion for the next event, the next trip,
for the family photos

for the trips to Mexico for some kind of miracle
and to Chicago for chemotherapy,
and for her loved-soaked mother stories.

She has suffered for over forty-five years
with cancer, three or more primary sites,
mixed with lost love and not enough money,

and friends coming out of their walls
to help her, and she, trying to lead
the Yul Brynner Foundation

For Head And Neck Canter, --
that man who said, "When you watch this,
I'll be dead.  Whatever you do, don't smoke."

I say, when she smiles,
the patch over her cancer hole lifts
and I take small bites and listen

and can't even hear my problems--
they have crawled inside her head,
down into her heart

and moved through her body,
out her fingers and toes,
coming back to bless me.

And then she walks me to her truck,
gives me a book of love and laughter and prayers
and says, I never say goodbye, just so long."

Then she smiles so beautifully--
the patch always matched with her dress,
and me, embracing my tiny pain.

William L. Killian
Written for Janet Trever
Wednesday, September 24, 1997
Tucson, AZ

Friday, March 25, 2011

Strawberry Friday: Tree



Tree

I am no longer afraid of mirrors where I see the sign of the Amazon,
the one who shoots arrows.

There was a fine line across my chest where a knife entered,
but now a branch winds about the scar and travels from arm to heart.

Green leaves cover the branch, grapes hang there and a bird appears.

What grows in me now is vital and does not cause me harm.

I think the bird is singing.

I have relinquished some of the scars.

I have designed my chest with care given to an illuminated manuscript.

I am no longer ashamed to make love.

Love is a battle I can win.

I have a body of a warrior who does not kill or wound.

On the book of my body, I have permanently inscribed a tree.


Mom writes: Someone in AVANTA gave me a great poster picture of a bare breasted woman who had apparently had a mastectomy and then a beautiful vine tattooed all across her scars.  I loved it and hung it in my bedroom.  Sometime, over the years, I would hear my kids explaining my strange collection of art to their friends while they were passing through my room.

[yes, I can confirm the poster was hung prominently and proudly, and took some getting used to]


Photograph by Halla Hammid, words by Deena Metzger, poster design by Shiela Levrant de Bretteville.
Image credit: Deena Metzger, as viewed on http://www.fawi.net/BC/heroines.html
Text viewed at http://www.donnellycolt.com/catalog/humrightposter.html

Friday, February 25, 2011

Strawberry Story: Wild Strawberries

Wild Strawberry viewed on MamaKopp Etsy account.

Wild Strawberries
By Shel Silverstein

Are Wild Strawberries really wild?
Will they scratch an adult, will they snap at a child?
Should you pet them, or let them run free where they roam?
Could they ever relax in a steam-heated home?
Can they be trained to not growl at the guests?
Will a litterbox work or would they leave a mess?
Can we make them a Cowberry, herding the cows,
Or maybe a Muleberry pulling the plows,
Or maybe a Huntberry chasing the grouse,
Or maybe a Watchberry guarding the house,
And though they may curl up at your feet oh so sweetly,
Can you ever feel that you trust them completely?
Or should we make a pet out of something less scary,
Like the Domestic Prune or the Imported Cherry,
Anyhow, you’ve been warned and I will not be blamed
If your Wild Strawberry cannot be tamed.

Monday, January 31, 2011

Chapter 4: Footprints on my bladder

The Culprit

I've Got Footprints On My Bladder
by Patricia Graham

Oh, I've got footprints on my bladder.
I've got babies on my brain.
All day long I'm a-chatter,
'Bout clowns or dollies I'm gonna frame.

My stomach is expanding
And is restless and demanding.
Do ya think I kin ever fit
Into a dress the size I'm gonna git?

I wonder what "Ish" would say
If he saw me standing this-away
Surveying my expansion
-a-itching and a-scratching?
How long d'I hafta wait
-afore I git to hatching?

Oh, I've got footprints on my bladder.
I've got babies on my brain.
The sex, it doesn't matter,
But I can't think of a name!

At the time Pat wrote this she was Assistant Editor of the Littleton Independent.  December 1969

Friday, December 31, 2010

Strawberry Story: Wild Strawberries

 
Strawberries that in gardens grow
Are plump and juicy fine,
But sweeter far as wise men know
Spring from the woodland vine
select lines from Wild Strawberries by Robert Graves

Friday, October 22, 2010

Celebrate weirdness!

Laura blowing bubbles at my wedding in Alaska.

From my surrogate mom, Laura Bernstein:

I add my enthusiastic voice to this blog, saluting Janet on what would have been her 67th earthly birthday. She was an inspiring friend and a beautiful human being. Our relationship enriched my life in more ways than I can enumerate. One huge way is the presence of her daughter Sarah in my life as a "surrogate daughter" after Janet's passing. Thank you, Janet, for all your gifts! Now I would like to share a poem I wrote years ago (part of the original book) that Janet enjoyed so much, entitled "To My Children":

TO MY CHILDREN

Celebrate weirdness!
Wine it and dine it.
Design it to fit the occasion.
Rise to it.
Deny those who try to decry it with scornful remarks and limited vision.

Elevate eccentricity!
Beware the constricting, confining, conventional congress of head shakers, heart breakers, nay sayers, soul slayers.
Dare to be different.
Delight in it.
Heighten it.
Make it your home.

Applaud anomalies!
Anchor your ship in the singular sea of uncertainty.
Savor the strangeness.
Arrange bliss in whimsical patterns-- Irregular, quirky, quite murky to those who are closed to outlandish enchantments.

Cultivate non-conformity!
Be weirdly-wise with each enterprise.
Shrink from stale definitions and pale reflections and pallid convictions.
Relish exotic delicacies of expanded views.
Tempt your palate with spicy spaciousness.

Celebrate weirdness!
Walk the wide path of surprises.
Hope rises above the horizon of those who despise it; who narrowly cut down to size every dream-seeking, scheme-speaking lover of mystery.

--Laura Bernstein