Friday, March 12, 2010

Mountain Poet's Journal

Don't Walk Ahead

One does not walk ahead of yesterdays,
but behind tomorrow.

Having come from some place,
is not the same as going somewhere.


It takes wisdom to see where we've been.

But it will take even more,
to find our way in the dark.

            ***
- Mountain Poet, Copyright March 2001

Portals Into Forever -Anthology
International Library of Poetry, 2001
ISBN - 0-7951-5036-9
Under A Quicksilver Moon Series

15 comments:

  1. The Monsoons Return At Last

    I listened to the thunder roll in
    for over an hour.
    It crossed the sky horizontally,
    flashing like a beacon of change.

    First came the long echoing rumble
    of something big and as it neared,
    the sound turned up high and full.
    More than cymbals or drums,
    it was as if the whole sky
    full of instruments was tuning
    up for a bash.

    Suddenly I remembered myself
    as a small girl,
    huddled between the covers
    when a bad storm passed overhead.

    By the time I was a teenager,
    I'd learned how to absorb
    some of the power of these storms.
    I'd sit on rooftops with a friend
    and wait for the swirling black clouds
    to break right over our heads.

    Then we'd go back inside,
    wet and exhilarated by a downpour
    and the raw touch of Nature
    released on cold skin.

    Now I'm middle-aged and still wondering
    about these storms.

    Listening to their movements,
    and watching them
    with something mixed with awe.

    It isn't angels playing dice,
    but it could be a force full of more
    than motion and light.


    - Mtn Poet, July 6, 2002

    ReplyDelete
  2. That Last Vision of You

    That last vision of you,
    set a deep fire to me.
    I found a thousand snapshots in my mind.
    Your leaving this world ripped through me
    like a gale force of grief beyond description.
    You and I were suppose to grow old together.
    We were going to laugh at ourselves,
    and others as the gray crept in
    and our knees began to ache.
    Even in wheelchairs
    we could have laughed together.

    The level of intensity from a world
    left void of your being
    sent a shock through my
    very core identity,
    a grief so great
    that entire rivers of feelings
    long gone broke through me.

    Did our lives together flash before my eyes,
    on the day we first met?

    I am left with that first and last vision of you
    burning in me like a star*.

    ***


    Poet's Footnote:
    This poem is dedicated to my dear friend Louie R. Ingle,(September 30, 1946 - January 17, 2001)
    and spawned by friend Greg Francis
    who passed on yesterday (October 13, 2002).
    They will always be missed and cherished for their time here on earth.
    May the Great Spirit* Bless Them
    & Keep Them, Always.
    May they be free as the eagle flying
    over canyon rim beyond.
    Strong with gentle direction.

    Mtn Poet's Journal, - October 14, 2002

    ReplyDelete
  3. Lunar Eclipse

    The last full lunar eclipse
    of this millennium
    brought to mind
    your enchanting face
    under the August full moon.

    Can I ever gaze upon this circular reflection
    in the moody night sky again,
    without your image coming to mind?

    Some say that the moon
    holds the dark forces
    of our nature.

    Our meeting
    brought forth both
    the dark and the light,
    in each of us.

    Fitting like a perfect star
    in the night sky
    of my deepest desires
    and the need,
    to fill them fully with light.

    ***


    by Mountain Poet
    September 28, 1996

    To Doyne McElvain,
    in loving memory
    November 1, 2002
    three years after
    your passing.

    You were too young to die,
    old soul that you were.

    ReplyDelete
  4. 2870.7 in reply to 2870.5

    The Dying Aspen

    The arborist said three of our aspen trees have cancerous spores and must be cut down.

    I am reminded of Doyne
    who died of cancer suddenly,
    of Linda who struggles with leukemia,
    and of Will whose tumor in his neck
    is expanding. He believed in natural care,
    but has taken a turn for the better
    and started taking chemo at the end.
    I hope the last good fight is worth it.

    I would wish to go out fighting,
    faced with the same odds.

    The trees it seems are subject
    to the same sort of stress and trauma,
    but they won't get hospice care.

    They will be taken down with a saw,
    and I shall mourn them as if they were fellow travelers on this road of life.

    I shall miss their golden leaves come autumn, miss their soft tapping this spring.
    The view from the front of the house
    won't be the same without their tall
    white legs standing guard around the driveway.

    If you've ever hugged a tree,
    you might know what it is to miss one
    even before they're gone.

    ***

    Mtn Poet's Journal, April 25, 2003

    ReplyDelete
  5. When I think upon what inspires me,
    you do it easily.

    Is it your words,
    the sound of your voice,
    or the memory
    of your tentative touch upon my skin.

    That smoldering gaze
    across a lunch table
    more times than I can count.

    My memory fails me sometimes,
    but these distinct impressions
    don't fail me.

    The longing you inspire is
    like a fire burning.
    Coal bed full of embers
    too hot to touch.

    Today you told me that going
    back to school
    was a waste of time.
    I used to think that way.
    Before I became so comfortable,
    or so free and easy.

    You also said a course
    in journalism
    was beneath me.
    But I don't want to write
    for a paper,
    I want to write
    with deadlines.

    It's death at the door
    that moves me to seek
    something faster.

    Something to drive me
    beyond recognition,
    and to move me quickly
    to the very end
    of my own confusion
    and fear.

    Were I to write a book about walls,
    I'd want you to come
    and tear them down anytime
    they grew too high.

    Whenever a wall divided us,
    I'd wish for you to play
    Humpty Dumpty and put me
    back together again.

    Here I am in search of myself,
    or you.

    ***

    - Mtn Poet's Journal, April 30, 2003

    ReplyDelete
  6. The Promise of Woodland Park

    Under the white and blue moon
    leaning on a wooden fence
    high in the mountains
    looking at your face
    as if for the first time.

    Our kiss was full of passion
    and promises to keep, elsewhere.

    Ten years later
    and all I remember is
    what we didn't do.

    ***

    - Mtn Poet's Journal, May 1st

    ReplyDelete
  7. Written On The Fly


    The red-headed finch
    has brought his mate
    to the straw basket house
    that I hung hoping
    I would hear
    the birds sing,
    this spring.

    A small patch of snow
    sticks stubbornly
    to the ground
    beneath the hot tub,
    refusing to give
    up on winter,
    just yet.

    There are large piles
    of paper on my desk
    threatening peace
    until I can go
    through them.

    How difficult it is to discard
    remnants of things
    laden with memory or romance.

    I try to sleep
    but am still haunted
    by your face.

    I try to move
    my mind anywhere
    but on you,
    or in you.

    I can only hope the coming spring
    will bring me back into bloom.

    ***


    - Mountain Poet, March 12, 2010

    ReplyDelete
  8. How Can We Be Friends?

    Love is patient,
    how long will it be
    before I see you again?
    I've never strayed far
    from my heart,
    even though I know
    the urge to run from feeling,
    too much or too little.

    Love is kind,
    be gentle with your self.
    This struggle is just one
    more mountain.

    Climb it, and expand
    your heart.
    It will not break,
    take the leap.
    Learn to love greater
    than you ever have before.

    Love is not envious,
    nor does it boast.
    My heart is no more
    or less than yours.
    My life though different,
    comes from the same race.

    We live in the same era.
    Beyond time and space,
    we are all one.

    Love bears all things,
    hopes all things, endures all things,
    does thou believeth in all things?

    I have friends
    who were once lovers,
    but what's greater than this,
    is love unconditionally given.

    Love does not delight in evil,
    but in truth.
    This love is true.
    Was what you've told me
    all these years a lie?
    Without love we die.

    Love never fails.
    The darkness is within you.
    Let love live, and it will guide you
    firmly into the Light*



    ***

    Mountain Poet's Journal - April 24, 2006.

    ReplyDelete
  9. Fish Feel Pain


    A new study concludes that fish feel pain.
    The anglers make the distinction
    between receptors in the mouth
    and the lack of a cognizant brain,
    to the sensations of a hook in the mouth
    that makes the fish pull away.

    I've seen fish wince when I was young.

    Life is said to begin at the first breath.
    But every year the ability to breathe
    seems to get younger and younger.
    Technology that kick starts
    the smallest human
    has us wondering when life actually begins.
    Life and death are just flip sides
    to the same miraculous coin.

    So far everyone seems to be in agreement
    as to when life fundamentally ends.
    But between the fish and the tiny babies,
    small enough to fit in the palm of one's hand
    It still looks like all life is sacred.

    ***

    Mountain Poet, ©2003
    Editor's Choice Award
    'The Colors of Life" Anthology
    Internation Library of Poetry
    ISBN #0-7951-5239-6, Copyright 2003

    ReplyDelete
  10. Death Comes In Moments

    We think we understand death
    because in a moment
    something significant is gone.
    But we could be wrong
    in that our dying
    may last a long time.

    Death comes in layers.
    We move through the moment
    as if in a dream.
    That dream could be forever,
    or just another petal unfolded.

    The significant question
    about the dream is,
    do we ever awaken?


    Mountain Poet's Journal, 11/12/03

    ReplyDelete
  11. The Silenced Bells of The Shrine

    The night air is cold and clear
    as the bell silenced in the canyon
    because it was annoying someone
    whose just arrived in the neighborhood.

    I miss the shrine bells
    beating back the clouds.
    A red fox runs down the driveway
    aware that I am watching
    but he's lived here longer than we have.
    We're at home together.

    The path by the creek
    runs toward the house,
    the deer come, the racoons,
    the red-tailed fox, and occasionally
    something in the shadows on the hunt,
    prowling out of reach.

    Something I can not name,
    but sense watching from the trees
    in the darkness where I stand
    drinking in the iced air.

    Wondering how many creatures
    lie just beyond
    what I can see or hear.

    I know they see me clearer
    than I will ever see them.

    My quietiest movements broadcast where
    I shall go next before I get there.

    Whoever those eyes belong to,
    we're both searching in the night.

    Oh! To be wild again,
    free as the creek
    running down the hill.

    We're in different places
    in the physical world
    as well as in the mental sphere.

    I don't know how to comfort you
    or soothe your brow.
    I don't know how to say
    what sweetness your being
    brings to me.
    What tenderness you wave
    through my heart like a song.

    So I send you poetry
    hoping that the rhythm
    of the words
    might break loose the grief
    that runs between the days and nights
    of your deepest burden
    and release.

    I used to set my day
    by the times the bells were rung.

    "Have no fear my dear," You said.
    "God's love is perfect."

    ***


    Mountain Poet
    March 28, 2004
    Laptop Bits and Pieces

    ReplyDelete
  12. Of Mountains and Clouds

    The mountains were bathed in thick clouds
    gray, swirling, wet, heavy clouds.
    Your call reminded me
    that clouds come and go.
    I have but to watch the horizon
    to see all manner of movement.

    The sky is a mirror
    of a multitude of moods.
    I have but to wait for you
    to experience the full range
    of wind and clouds.

    ***

    Mountain Poet
    April 5, 2004
    Mountain Daylight Savings Change

    ReplyDelete
  13. IF For A Moment

    If for a moment
    the leaves sprouted all at once
    spring would run into summer.
    In a flash our lives would be full
    soft, green, new like the leaves.

    If for a moment
    our dreams became reality,
    we might not know
    which season we'd become.

    My hand opens palm wide to the sky
    to receive the blessings from above.

    If for a moment
    my hand fell upon your thigh.
    would it be my hand that comes to mind?

    Your hand on my thigh.
    If for a moment,
    I'd sigh.

    ***

    Mountain Poet, 3/28/04
    Lap Top Bits and Pieces

    ReplyDelete
  14. The exalted lover takes the woman
    embracing her
    until the wetness of their form
    fades into a mixture of smoke and heat.

    What kind of chemistry is this?

    These waves of feeling
    so far away as to leave
    only the shadow
    of strokes and kisses
    upon my breath and lips.

    So far away as to be
    miraculously close.
    The distance no further
    than a dream.

    You touch me here.
    I touch you there.

    Is it more than memory now,
    that guides us?

    The simple stretch of hearts to mind.
    Your hand in mine, goodnight.

    ***


    - Mountain Poet

    ReplyDelete
  15. The Smile of the Satisfied

    A smile
    on a woman satisfied
    reveals itself
    in the pale morning light
    under the last ray of moonshine
    before the sun
    takes over for the stars.

    ***
    - Mountain Poet, 1974

    Soon to be published in a 2002 anthology
    entitled "Letters from The Soul" due out in the fall.

    ReplyDelete