Josh Simmons replied to Frankc1450's status
@Frankc1450@union.place Right?! So relatable 😅 And I love the imagery!
Technicolor geek. Slow reader. Main social presence: @josh@josh.tel / josh.tel/@josh
I try to post a poem every day.
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@Frankc1450@union.place Right?! So relatable 😅 And I love the imagery!
Winter Winds by Les Murray
Like appliqué on nothingness like adjectives in hype fallen bracts of the bougain- magenta-and-faded-villea eddy round the lee verandah like flowers still partying when their dress has gone home.
— The Biplane Houses by Les Murray (Page 20)
& SO by Amanda Gorman
It is easy to harp, Harder to hope.
This truth, like the white-blown sky, Can only be felt in its entirety or not at all. The glorious was not made to be piecemeal. Despite being drenched with dread, This dark girl still dreams. We smile like a sun that is never shunted.
Grief, when it goes, does so softly, Like the exit of that breath We just realized we clutched.
Since the world is round, There is no way to walk away From each other, for even then We are coming back together.
Some distances, if allowed to grow, Are merely the greatest proximities.
— Call Us What We Carry by Amanda Gorman (Page 25)
Poppies by Mary Oliver
The poppies send up their orange flares; swaying in the wind, their congregations are a levitation
of bright dust, of thin and lacy leaves. There isn't a place in this world that doesn't
sooner or later drown in the indigos of darkness, but now, for a while, the roughage
shines like a miracle as it floats above everything with its yellow hair. Of course nothing stops the cold,
black, curved blade from hooking forward— of course loss is the great lesson.
But also I say this: that light is an invitation to happiness, and that happiness,
when it's done right, is a kind of holiness, palpable and redemptive. Inside the bright fields,
touched by their rough and spongy gold, I am washed and washed in the river of earthly delight—
and what are you going to do— what can you do about it— deep, blue night?
— Devotions by Mary Oliver (Page 291)
The Plunge by Ada Limón
I bet the steady well never complains about all the flash dipping in, coins, coins, and more coins. This life is a fist of fast wishes caught by nothing but the fishhook of tomorrow's tug. I shoved my money in the water once, threw it like a guaranteed ticket to cash; it never came true, not the wish, nor the towering person I was bound to be. But the back-of-the-throat thrill was real, when the surface's shine broke. It was enough to go back again and again, and throw my whole jonesing body in.
— Bright dead things by Ada Limón (Page 67)
For Those Who Would Govern by Joy Harjo
First question: Can you first govern yourself?
Second question: What is the state of your own household?
Third question: Do you have a proven record of community service and compassionate acts?
Fourth question: Do you know the history and laws of your principalities?
Fifth question: Do you follow sound principles? Look for fresh vision to lift all the inhabitants of the land, including animals, plants, elements, all who share this earth?
Sixth question: Are you owned by lawyers, bankers, insurance agents, lobbyists, or other politicians, anyone else who would unfairly profit by your decisions?
Seventh question: Do you have the authority by the original keepers of the lands, those who obey natural law and are in the service of the lands on which you stand?
— An American Sunrise by Joy Harjo (Page 74)
The Fated Sky continues the grand sweep of alternate history begun in The Calculating Stars. It is 1961, and …
I Go Down to the Shore by Mary Oliver
I go down to the shore in the morning and depending on the hour the waves are rolling in or moving out, and I say, oh, I am miserable, what shall— what should I do? And the sea says in its lovely voice: Excuse me, I have work to do.
— Devotions by Mary Oliver (Page 45)
Man Up, Hercules by Nikita Gill
When I was a child, my worst nightmare was to see my father cry. Until I was older, I never really thought nor asked why.
It occurs to me now that the world around me doesn't want men to feel. It emphasizes stoicism till they bottle up their feelings, only one part of them is allowed to be real.
And if ever one of them falters, 'man up' becomes the dark magic to charm them back into line. 'Man up' is that villain who shows up with lackeys 'grow a pair' and 'boys don't cry' uninvited to parties.
We tell our sons stories about heroes like Hercules, but forget to mention how Hercules' rage caused him to murder his entire family.
And by telling them stories where anger becomes the only acceptable way they can express themselves, we are teaching them shouting, punching, yelling is all they can ever do to release themselves from hell.
And this is how cursed phrases like 'man up' contribute to the greatest killer of men under 45.
Repression leads to depression, depression leads to trying to find ways to be alive and after years of being told not to feel, the only way to truly feel it all becomes suicide.
We have created nooses with words and watch passively as our sons tighten them around each other's necks.
So I will tell my son, I will say, Cry, let the dam burst, and let the rivers you are holding back run free. It will release everything that hurts you and finally you will be able to breathe.
The definition of who you are as a man is too powerful to be swayed by a phrase, it doesn't have to be proven through self-hate.
When they tell you to 'man up' look them in the eyes and just say, 'I will not, no.' Become the earth, the rebellion your heart needs for your love of yourself to grow.
— Fierce Fairytales by Nikita Gill (Page 127)
The Journey by Mary Oliver
One day you finally knew what you had to do, and began, though the voices around you kept shouting their bad advice— though the whole house began to tremble and you felt the old tug at your ankles. "Mend my life!" each voice cried. But you didn't stop. You knew what you had to do, though the wind pried with its stiff fingers at the very foundations— though their melancholy was terrible. It was already late enough, and a wild night, and the road full of fallen branches and stones. But little by little, as you left their voices behind, the stars began to burn through the sheets of clouds, and there was a new voice, which you slowly recognized as your own, that kept you company as you strode deeper and deeper into the world, determined to do the only thing you could do— determined to save the only life you could save.
— Devotions by Mary Oliver (Page 349)
@gastarbajterica@dju.social I can hardly think of a more fitting poem to meditate on this particular solstice. Thank you for the continued gift of poetry!
@gastarbajterica@dju.social I look forward to your responses every day! Really enjoyed the cadence on this one, almost left me breathless toward the end which seemed very much intended by the author.
Note to self: revisit hashtags in BookWyrm. It seems to render yours appropriately when they come through, though not when I tried including them in my original posts. Would love to make this more discoverable for fellow travelers.
Affirmation for Living On by Nikita Gill
You are still here. Despite what time tells you. Despite the loneliness. Despite the darkness. Despite the pain. Despite the gritted teeth and drowning thoughts. You are still here. And that matters more than you know.
— Where Hope Comes From by Nikita Gill (Page 55)
If a Tornado Strikes, We'll Live in Its Eye by Brad Aaron Modlin
If broken bricks whirlwind around us. If a green sky and a train sound and kitchen knives and engine parts. If basement pipes and something steel from the roof. If no bathroom or ditch to hide in. If her bare arms and dangerous tin cans from Thursday's recycling. If the bedside lamp we clicked on-off-on-off-on every morning. If nails flying by. If a refrigerator tries to land on our skulls. If she needs someone smarter or stronger or funny. If checkbooks and the books we took too much of each other's time to read. If we're both so damn exhausted. If one in two houses ends in tornadoes.
If I tell her about the couple at the Greyhound station on my way home from Birmingham. If cyclone dirt in my eyes, and hair in her eyes, and her hair in my face. If glass shards like fish scales. If a crumpled chimney like ours. If it's our neighbor's house. If we've forgotten what our house looked like. If she stands so close she's standing on my toes. If I say, At the bust station, I saw a husband and wife asleep on each other. If backs on the terminal floor, they pointed their legs at opposite walls. If each rested their head atop the other's. If she's on my toes. If she doesn't scrunch her eyes to answer me, and say, But that can't physically happen.
— Everyone at this party has two names by Brad Aaron Modlin (Page 80)
For Tom Shaw S.S.J.E (1945-2014) by Mary Oliver
Where has this cold come from? "It comes from the death of your friend."
Will I always, from now on, be this cold? "No, it will diminish. But always it will be with you."
What is the reason for it? "Wasn't your friendship always as beautiful as a flame?"
— Devotions by Mary Oliver (Page 8)