poetry

restoration of water

restoration of water

The same clear stream flows from the tap today
but now it’s changed:
they say it’s safe,
which changes everything.

Charlie told us how it was to wait for water
at the mall in Zimbabwe, after things fell apart.
He’d grown up with safe water,
and when things first went wrong
he thought the water trucks would be temporary.
Someday he’d simply turn the tap again.
But, years later, he still waits in line.

When they said our water wasn’t safe
it was the latest in a string of improbable truths –
like December wildfire
like blocks of charred houses
like insurrection.

So, today, when they invite us
to turn the tap and drink,
I let go a caught breath
that’s been squeezing my throat
ever since we stopped
to fill the first jug.

poetry

on the disbanding of the Sifter Squad

on the disbanding of the Sifter Squad

I signed up to sift ash
but within hours
the public health people
warned us to stop.

Isn’t that just how it is these days
when Grandma’s soup bowl
and a couple of drawer pulls
will find a way to kill you, too?

I was looking forward to playing
neighborhood archeologist.
I was looking forward to finding
something someone had lost.

poetry

To Our Mayor

To Our Mayor

We know your heart holds
a thousand holes
as ash settles on us all.

It would be fair if you felt the flames
one burden too many,
if you asked why this, why now?

Instead we see you on the tv
confident and grateful
patient and protective

ably leading us
away from the brink.

We see how you suffer for us –
the late nights and early mornings,
the thick binders, the endless weeds.

You’re our own Jacinda
and we love you.
You’re engineering us a future.
You’re saving us a home.

poetry

aerial view

Photo courtesy of The Colorado Sun

aerial view

the subdivision’s smile
is now pitted
with yawning cavities
each an uprooted family

the open wounds
are ready for rot

what could we plant
in each smoking crater?
whose roots might fill
these aching holes?

my hand restlessly sifts ash
searching for seed

poetry

checking the names

checking the names

my index finger ticks down the names
and finds another family I know

but more than that, there’s the grief
distilled in the very action

so many fingers traced down so many lists
stopped and shaken by what they touch

or who they learn they’ll not touch again
such hope and desperation in this act

caressing the lines that make the letters
that spell out someone’s fate

poetry

after the evacuation order’s lifted

after the evacuation order’s lifted

when you first arrive home
after the town caught fire
things will look the same:

soft slabs of snow will mushroom
atop parked car roofs
and Christmas lights will still wrap trees

it’s not until you reach your kitchen
that the full import meets you –
your home still stands, thank God

and the firefighters and Aeolus –
and it stands at 45 degrees and falling.
one of you starts the pellet stove

while the other takes the truck to find more pellets
and free space heaters
and you quietly begin living a new way.

next you look at the gas stove (impotent)
and realize you haven’t means to boil water
and can’t drink what’s in the tap

so you forage for water, too, life stripped to its elements,
five-gallon jugs filled by a friend
in the next town west, where taps magically still flow clean

and now you learn to pour liter carafes
and even dainty cups after a day’s practice
from what’s usually your campsite stash.

when the large men clomp inside
in their Carhartts and work boots
big beards and cold toes

and give you back warm nights
and hot water, you push gifts into
their wide palms: candy canes and

chocolate bars, gushing thanks, and beer,
and it turns out one lives two blocks away
and his toddler and your little neighbor are friends.

and in the midst of all this confusion
so many new ways of doing/being
there’s also the dark knowledge

that your son’s kindergarten teacher’s home
is now just another smoldering pit
and your dog’s brother now has no yard to call his own,

and 500 neighbors don’t have these inconveniences
of gas and water to deal with now
because everything is gone

poetry

New Year’s Eve after the Marshall Fire

New Year’s Eve after the Marshall Fire

when the only air to breathe
is so cold it burns your lungs
it, too, feeds your cells

in these the days of emergencies
of Plan B or C or D
or abandoning all plans
and surrendering to survival

let us remember
what a gift it is to have cold crystals
descend upon us

what a miracle that waves of fire
and whispers of snow
exist

poetry

Marshall Fire

My sister took this photo from her home on LaFarge Avenue shortly before evacuating.

Marshall Fire

our latest calamity:
half the town burning down

I crawl into bed after watching it burn
and the blanket shoots sparks into my hands

oh fire and ice gods
winter and spring axes

let me recall how to press these palms
so they still manage to hold joy

let me find a way to still
admire a stray spark

poetry

chokecherry

chokecherry

even when a great fat pit
sits right at the center of things
the fruit can still be savored

let sun bake tart into tang
until the wizened sphere
rests against your unsure tongue

nibble away anyway
until your mouth is flooded
with chewy purple-blue

surprising reassurance
there’s still some sweetness left
in this old blasted summer

poetry

birthday season

birthday season

we’re so glad you’re here
your spark makes our lives glow
and since you drew your first breath
things have never been the same

we’re saying this
with candles and cards
wrapping and ribbon
doughnuts and ice cream
Sharpie on the door jamb
marking your ascent into adulthood
friends and family stopping by
to throw the floodlight of their love
squarely in your grinning face

every year we mark the miracle
that you arrived at all
(and better yet – you are amazing
and better still – we still breathe together
now)