After covid, this must feel so different, the
block schedule, getting off zoom & back in the
classroom. He's so happy when he
does his work once it's assigned. We
expect that he'll have some late nights--but for school.
Free period he plays chess in the locker room? I mean, his
grades are strong, his attitude is good, and we're
happy for him. He should be proud.
In a few months, though,
Joel, he needs to
know that it's high gear time. Who will write his
letter when all they see is him playing chess? Her
mother & I are proud of her grades, but
now is the time to find an office
or club or something to show she took on a
pinnacle experience somewhere. Find it
quick, but make sure it's a thing you love ...
robotics or service or an AP ...
something you really love. It's
time to step up. Colleges &
universities are looking. When's your first college
visit? I just don't know
what we should be doing. There's no
excuses anymore--you're not a freshman.
You are a gift to us, Mr. Gar-
za. Have a great day.
what lies beneath
illumines what's above
diaphanous weight
a statue baptised
the bracelet
a shining silver choice
the depths indistinct
no stones no plants
she is alone
and elegantly
out of place
ennobling what holds her
her body is not at rest
toes spread arms drifting
maybe we're all suspended
and safe, floating
facing what's above
listening to the depths
Green burrs grow there,
dandelions & weeds I can't name.
Cigarette butts & candy wrappers
catch low in the chain link fence.
You have to look up
to see what it meant
to me all those years ago.
Look up to the wide dry space,
for running, walking, daydreaming
a life of an adult you (never this one).
Look back to the line
of live oak trees along the fence,
thick shade for boyhood
summer days
and cover for stolen embraces
on the thin flannel sheet you didn't know
she had in her trunk.
Nobody saw you that night.
Nobody sees what you saw
back there back then.
Before I grew into doubt & anger, disappointment & disgust
with the church, I prayed daily to
Virgin Mary.
She was calm & beautiful, her pain serene,
not a crown of
thorns.
Let it be done to me--disarming
service & bodily yielding, faithful, maternal & beautiful,
clothed in the stars & sky, atop the moon.
Pray for me, Mary. I will be good.
In some ways, I've written about this part of my life before, most evident in the Virgen de Guadalupe pendant above which I have worn since I was thirteen. but never with these parameters, where each line length is dictated by digits in my phone number.
The city restricts watering during summer, for good reason,
so the man tends the brown patches daily by hand.
Seven thirty and seven thirty at morning & at night.
He times each session each day down to the minute.
He gets to know his lawn intimately, patch by patch,
the narrow band right by the sidewalk nine feet long,
the yellowed oval that stretches out just behind the mailbox,
the tight corners near the turns by the lawn lights.
His fist around the hose, his thumb widens the spray,
the mist cooling the only man outside this hot night.
Sometimes cars pass him, their fingers lifted in a hello,
their palms steering them down the alley to their garages.
On vacation, he worries about the lawn, patch by patch.
Over time all see the green return stronger than before.
Over the summer, I wrote a lot of watering-the-lawn poems. This one is kind of a sonnet, but with ten words per line rather than ten syllables.
The child enters.
"Knock knock" "Who's there?"
The father wonders at
the enduring appeal of jokes,
the older we get
the fewer we hear.
The child grins through
the setup, knowing that it's worked
all day long
friend to friend
playground & cafeteria,
a center stage moment
he's rehearsed & honed.
The child delivers the punch.
There's more ah than ha
at first before the father
shifts from discovery to joy.
They laugh together.
Let there always be
shared moments like this,
an assurance for each,
a luxuriating in who's there
and why. May the doors
to their hearts always
be open to each other.
This is inspired by a writing challenge that Matthew Olzmann gave my students--write a poem that begins with a joke and ends with a prayer. Photo of Diego Rivera with his child here.
May your feet be warm & dry
May you hear your name said with a smile today
May your nights be peaceful
May your work be meaningful
May someone you love think that you are smart & funny
May your coffee be served just right
May you see your child laughing
May you enjoy the book you're reading -- and the next one
May you feel the warmth of the setting sun
May your children be safe & happy
May they grow up to love & talk to one another
May they have dogs & beloveds that love dogs
May the clouds always inspire you
This is inspired by a three-part writing challenge that Sarah Freligh gave my students--write blessings for all people everywhere, then blessings for someone difficult to love, then for yourself. The image is by my friend Scott Lewis, from his series God & Globalization.
The wind was blowing most of my first day in town, and the snow flakes fell gently, slowly, cartwheeling to me with cartoonish clarity, like a confetti’d welcome for us alone. We were two blocks from a good bar, a decent diner, a video store, and an El stop. We were in love.
She had chosen our home well–not the hippest neighborhood but still one that felt like a city I’d never known, like a place where the rest of my [ahem] … where the rest of our life together would begin.
Instead it was an extended break, not quite vacation not quite holding pattern. I continued teaching but not well. She found a job at company called Oracle. My wife looked her up. (I was curious too.) Apparently, she still works there. She set down roots; I did too, somewhere else.
The wind blows there even now as strong as ever. I saw it on TV the other day. It looks just the same as it did that January.
The image is from Andrew Sullivan’s View From Your Window feature. I saved it as “ChicagoIL930pm” but cannot find the original source or photographer.
You create an account gently, and you construct
a password--a nonsense mixture made memorable,
letters, numbers, characters made special
somehow, a song lyric, a sentence you alone know.
You pull the doc from the drive, a last look
at a once-inspired miracle, a polished
inert version of the original spark, now rendered
regular, out of your hand & into gently.
Gently receives the doc, a new screen
assuring you that the server worked.
You forget and wait, gently. Gently managing
the impersonal viewable shareable
version of you at your most artful,
most vulnerable, most hopeful.
Three weeks later, gently a message
in your inbox.
No.
Thank you.
Sincerely,
Gently.
This is inspired by Sophia Terazawa, who gave my class the following writing prompt: Personify an adverb. I chose to personify the writing submission platform Submittable as the adverb "Gently". So above every time I originally referred to the platform, I substituted the word Gently.
An image I grew up with, in my home, on funeral cards, at school, everywhere.
I read somewhere that G-d is merciful,
watching, judging, understanding, but still
merciful. The quality of mercy, I read
somewhere else, is not strained. It droppeth like ...
well, it's freely flowing. It isn't meted out
like some precious resource (though it is).
It is worth much more than it costs to give.
There is always a person to forgive
and a reason to forgive, if for no other reason
than that it gives you practice
in feeling how little it takes to bless
a person in error, in distress, deep in shame.
Even when we know that they'll just mess up
again, in our mercy, we bring a part of heaven
to earth.
"kyrie eleison" means "Lord, have mercy." This was my last sprint write with my students on May 18, 2022, modeled after Clint Smith's "Meteor Shower".