Thursday, June 11, 2015

dark black gumbo

It had been raining torrentially, days too cold for Texas in May.

One morning, there were ducks in the yard. Not out back in one of the newly sprung ponds, but out front in the middle of the spongy expanse of St Augustine. Two young, beautiful Mallards, perhaps a mating pair, bathing. My own lady birds watched casually from the front window, no particular interest in things with feathers. I stopped to admire with them.

After years of drought and water conservation, even our lakes are overfull, spillways Rubenesque; the Trinity has breached its banks in the middle of a concrete city, a beautiful exodus daring man to encroach, and the dam at Bastrop broke, the lake emptying. It was far enough from Houston that only land was hurt, but ominous to see the bottom of a lake once full.

June finally arrived. We finally got sun last week but the heat came with it, and suddenly it’s an overbearing 95 and my hands burn on the wheel on the drive home. Heat. I recall huge cracks in the dark black gumbo we called land in the '70s growing up. It'll be a summer like that. 

Perhaps we’ve grown apart, my first love, the Texas heat and I. Perhaps I'm realizing I'm a woman full grown and some physical labor, though still good and right in my mind, over the years, has become somewhat beyond me. Definitely though, it’s the love bites from the Mosquitoes that adore me, leaving me low, and slightly fevered.

Though not as low as those dark days of torrential rain.

nowhere man

S- says things happen out of nowhere. Well I found Nowhere. It's in Oklahoma.


I'm not sure it's the place where things are happening. 

Tuesday, June 09, 2015

j'arrive

It’s not an apartment,
a blank slate; you can’t just
drop your things in and it feels like you

walls of mint and lavender
room alit in glow:
door to – star moon moon star star –  window
yard overgrown

I’m startled by the vastness
bring the girls to sleep
door closed; sleep
light on my back to view the room
when waking

plantlings on the sill
dishes drying verticle
on the same bamboo rack I bought
I’m not sure when

unsure of the destination

I’m suddenly here

she

In the garden
There was a girl
Amidst a field fallow
Tending roses
Brightly yellow

And where was he
But absent
In the recollection of days
Of tending the home
Of tending the marriage

Life takes effort
She gave for two

now she lives for one