The House of Things You’ve Known

You must enter the dream
Like a rose petal unfolding
At midnight
Making no sound
And appearing not to move

The journey that is not a journey
Begins and ends on a rose petal
Unfolding

The rose has grown wild
Against a broken trellis
And an abandoned house
That sags with absence
This dream place would be barren

But for the rose
Petal unfolding
Grown wild against silence

Which you cannot break
Even if you could be heard
And what you will not say
Is all that remains of this house
The house of things you’ve known

The rose petal
Unfolding at midnight
Is why you have come

Not the broken window
Which allows time to seep
In and out of absence
Curling over and through
And past

You must exit the dream
You have seen enough
Been enough alone

Unable to start or end
The journey that is not a journey
While you were dreaming
The rose petal unfolded
Though neither of you moved

Doubt

Today’s editing efforts deteriorated into a session of self-doubt. After a few sweaty hours of hammering at a lost cause, I forced myself to close the word processing software, turn off the light, and shut the office door tight behind me. Ever have one of those days?

Mother’s Day

A few poems for Mother’s Day, starting with one of my own:

Longing (which goes with the photo, above)

My mother’s roses by Kay Middleton

Mother’s Pastry by Jeanette Gallagher

Helping My Daughter Move into Her First Apartment by Sue Ellen Thompson

From the Mockingbird Archives

These two images make up the entirety of my mockingbird archive. Mockingbirds are not scarce, nor are they particularly camera shy, so I don’t know why there aren’t more.

Speaking of mockingbirds, here’s a video/slideshow from my husband’s archives (with a poem I wrote after seeing the photos).

The Irises

I can’t explain my fascination with irises. My paternal grandmother kept them, but I have few reliable memories of her. They are Tennessee’s state flower, but I never planted them in Tennessee’s soil. Maybe my Virginia house and yard simply called for irises, as some metaphors call for poetry. Maybe my first iris bulbs, prized gifts in a brown paper bag, arrived when they decided I was ready.

Years ago, I preened over blooms, then gaped in awe as sturdy green fans survived hurricanes and snowstorms. I fumed through fall’s brutal business of separating stubborn roots and bulbs, then forgave my unruly brood when spring’s spectacular crop nodded thanks for my labor.

Soon they’ll need separating again. The work is tedious and itchy, fraught with allergy perils. I scratch and sneeze while my irises fight back with the only weapons they possess, an encamped army of spiders and mosquitoes, crickets and ants.  Maybe there will be another praying mantis, like the one that leapt into the cuff of my glove last time.

I’m still fascinated, if a bit overwhelmed by the magnitude of what grew out of that brown paper bag.

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I wrote parts of this piece several years ago. It was a starting place for what later became one of my favorite poems.