Friday, December 20, 2024

Celebrate the Miraculous

Celebrate the miraculous in

         all things, small things

         in you, in me

                   in them, those and others.

 

Celebrate in

         the moment

         in potential

         in hope, joy, love, faith, mercy,

                   Justice, harmony and gratitude.

 

Celebrate the miraculous

         in the giant oak and the mustard seed

         in peace between nations and

                   the reconciliation of a marriage

         in the hover of the hummingbird

                   at your love-filled feeder.

 

Celebrate clean water 

         in municipal water systems and

                   village wells

         food to eat, shoes to wear

                   safe havens.

 

Celebrate

         grace asked 

                   grace given and grace received.

 

Celebrate the miraculous in

         all things, small things

         in you, in me

                   in them, those and others.

 

Celebrate the miraculous in all of us.

 

Celebrate the miraculous

         even in broccoli.

Where I’m From

I’m from coal dust as much as stardust.

 

I’m from a coal town in the Alleghenies, 

a patchwork quilt of ethnic minorities,

all poor except those who weren’t. 

I’m from potatoes, casseroles, homemade noodles, 

and the aroma of fresh bread, 

soup for breakfast on frigid winter mornings and,

plain cooking, and practical life.

 

I’m from white-tail deer country,

pure mountain spring water,

from cricks and hollers, 

a dense laurel-laden forest, 

fishin’ holes created by beaver dams, 

from Northey to Southy and beyond, 

a playground I thought was Eden

where anything I needed or wanted 

was in walking distance. 

 

I’m from cinders on winter roads, 

boney piles, and the smell of burning sulfur;

from generations of dollar-a-day miners, 

men who knew Sunday 

as their only day in the sun.

I’m from a heritage of resolute women who 

challenged the powerful, 

marched for just causes, 

and ran for office 

even before they had the right to vote.

 

I’m from Frank and Sue Louise called Louise 

by everyone but Frank, who called her Suzie;

from a household nesting grandmothers and cousins

in rented houses with napkin rings on the table. 

I’m from quiet BTV evenings reading classics 

and listening to classical, swing and jazz

prepping my brother and me 

as the family firsts to go to college, 

an obligation I knew was mine 

as early as fourth grade. 

 

I’m from an Irish-Catholic, Scot-Presbyterian,

catechism and flannel-board-Jesus childhood 

with an ecumenical gaggle of friends.

 From childhood days of 

“I’m leaving, Mom” in the morning and

“You be home by dinner, Michael” 

knowing precisely when dinner would be.

 

I’m from 15¢ movies with a cartoon and newsreel 

and 25¢ double features on Saturdays.

I’m from climbing up on a stool at the soda fountain 

in the drugstore to get a sundae or Lemon Blennd;

and later the single packet “Speedy” Alka Selzer, 

the before the double-the-price pop-pop fizz-fizz 

two in a packet version. 

 

I’m from digging out swimming holes along Cold Stream 

on cool spring days before the town lake opened 

that my brother and father dug out before me. 

I’m from two-cent bubble-gum cards 

attached to my bike spokes,

from marbles, mumbly peg, red rover come over,

“High-buckety-buck,” and footballs 

made out of socks and friction tape

that at school we would put in our pockets 

alongside our knives. 

 

I’m from a generation that disappeared 

when the jobs along with the deep coal ran out, 

and the next war began.

The education that was to secure our future

became our underground railroad

to escape the mines 

and the town.

 

The “Where I’m From” of my children 

was to be built west of Eden.

 

 


 

 

 

 


Wednesday, December 4, 2024

Concerto

 


Unseen hands dance on the waters,

the grandest of grand pianos.

Surf and Spray, the maestro’s daughters,

frolic as creation’s sopranos.

 

The high tide’s arabesque renders

undercurrents to white scherzos

of unabashed vibrant splendors

while cavorting with Sands, its beaus.

 

Evocative cobalt bases

resonate beneath pastel strings

just as Mother Earth embraces

all life and all of nature sings,

 

and Moon’s ochre mirror shows her

to be the unseen composer.




   Original Oil and Acrylic by Amy Whitehouse

Monday, December 2, 2024

Communion


 


         Day pauses allowing

its brother Night

a lingering caress 

of their child Earth.

Morning beckons the faithful

from the wilderness of sleep

to rejoin the communion of all souls.


They rise in the landscape

paying homage to Mother Earth.


Aware of their ultimate frailty

they serve each other, 

completing the mystery of 

their place in the cosmos.


Ghost Ranch, New Mexico

Saturday, November 30, 2024

What if? . . . I Wonder!

 

What if?

Perhaps,

Do I hear? Do I see?

Maybe … Is it …? 

Could it be?

 

Could it be that …?

Was it ever? Is it now?

Seemingly …

Do you suppose …?

Potentially.

 

Might it?

Consider … Ponder … Muse.

Feasibly, could it ... ?

Perchance,

Possibly.

 

What if … we had

a world full of people

actually

not quite so certain?

O what glee!

 

What do I know?

I wonder …

The Case of the Queen Anne Chocolates

“In everything I did, I showed you that by this kind of hard work we must 

help the weak, remembering the words the Lord Jesus himself said: 

‘It is more blessed to give than to receive.’ ” 

~ from Paul, Acts 20:35



      It was nearly twenty years ago, Thanksgiving Day had passed, and the Christmas season was in full swing. Lights festooned the neighborhood. Stores, filled with Christmas trappings, were abuzz. I wandered through a drug store while waiting for a prescription. As I passed through the candy aisle with shelves stocked to the edges with bags and boxes of candy, samplers, assortments, clusters, fudge, and chocolate covered everything, I saw the Queen Annes. Seeing the candy incited riot in my mind.

      Since I was a small boy, I had given my dad a pound of chocolate covered cherries at Christmas. The annual ritual was not to be repeated for the first time in nearly half a century.  Dad’s birthday celebrated posthumously had just passed, and my emotions, brimming equal to the store shelves, spilled over. All those years of sustaining a tradition, the wrapping paper, yards of ribbon, bows, gift tags, and transparent tape, often used to excess, unraveled in my memory.

      I remembered walking on icy streets to the five and dime store to use my allowance to buy his special present. Later, I had the proceeds from a paper route to underwrite the cost.  Other years, I went to the “Candy Shop,” a before-its-time convenience store complete with groceries, pinball machine, jukebox, and dance floor in the back where as teens we gathered after school.  

      There were years during which my father smoked a pipe that I gave him a pound of tobacco, but I still gave him the Queen Annes. As I grew older and he grew beyond the pipe, I enjoyed watching him open that box of candy as much as I did as a child. He knew what was in the box even during the years I thought as many youngsters that it was cool to disguise it in a variety of packages. At times I put it in multiple boxes just to prolong his fun and my joy. He feigned surprise and thanked me profusely for my thoughtfulness. Eventually, I was able to afford more substantial gifts, but I still gave him the cherries if only for the nostalgia of an era passed. 

      It was not until the previous Christmas after my mother died and I especially wanted to sustain tradition that Dad in his quiet, offhand way finally disclosed to me the unimaginable.  

      “You know, Michael, I have never liked Queen Anne chocolates.” 

      “What?” I was flabbergasted. “What did you do with them?”

      “Your mother ate them.” 

      Mom had eaten them all. It never occurred to me that in all those years I had never seen Dad eat any of the candy. Why hadn’t he told me? Then I realized the Case of the Queen Anne Chocolates was solved. It was a case in which for once it was more blessed to receive than to give.  Not until that moment did I know how much joy he actually had all those years. He had fun allowing me the pleasure of giving my gift to him. What a hoot! 

      If I were asked to describe my father, I would say that he was a man, who for nearly fifty years would happily accept a gift for which he had no taste. Year after year he would graciously open the same gift just to sow the seeds of joy in the heart of a small boy regardless of his age.

      The torch has passed to my sons who began giving me the same box of candy. Fortunately, I like chocolate covered cherries because I think, annually, I am destined to receive them. Just the same I bought a box of Queen Annes. I savored each one.

The Rock

In the gloaming along a creek out the way,  I met a boy alight a rock. Secure in the swaddle of innocence he bore no remnants of yesterdays ...