Wednesday, April 01, 2015

Intro

It's still a month away, but I'm excited about May!

This is my third May Day. This March-April, I've been busy editing my book of poems about autism, which is coming from Brick Books in fall 2016. My editor wanted lots of new pieces to fill in the narrative, so I may post some of them here for feedback.

In May, I'd like to get back into working on my new project "What the Aspens Whispered," poems about my late grandparents and other stories of perseverance and loss. I'm working through my grandparents' love letter, sermon notes, and old photos for inspiration. I'm hoping to post a new poem two-three times a week.

Looking forward to meeting you all, either again or for the first time, and enjoying your words.

Angeline

P.S. Just a reminder to label your posts by clicking on the "Labels" tab on the right side of the page under "Post settings" and typing your name. Labels will allow you to see all your poems from each year at a glance without having to scroll through the entire blog. 

Monday, June 02, 2014

Goodbye May, hello June


Thank you, everyone, for all the poems and comments you've posted throughout the month. It's been good getting together with all of you, those making a repeat appearance and those who joined for the first time. 

We'll have to see what happens next year. My book comes out in spring, and I've no idea what that's going to be like— how busy or distracted I'm going to be— so it could be that I"l look for someone else to take charge, or we could give it a sabbatical. Let me know what you think about that.

And have a wonderful summer.

Saturday, May 31, 2014

8 a.m.


[Thanks!]

letter to a friend’s toddler after my miscarriage



when you were Adam
you were all sweet banana mush
piggy squeals and doo dahs
wiggly legs in my wagon

today you are a child
you tug my blood-stained thigh
re-marking the silver bands
around all I’ve lost

someday you will be Adam again
you will skate past
my chalet of dry tears
not knowing my name

Friday, May 30, 2014

Ferns



A         week    of         sun       and
under               garage              eaves,
baby    fists     uncurl,            stretch
slender             hands               up
in         praise   of        feathers.
Armed with     lace,     palm
trees     without
trunks, theme
park for
lady
bugs.

Thursday, May 29, 2014

In time

what happens to songs when they're no longer sung

the ones no one translates, the ones forgotten
   when the fashion changed, when you outgrew all that

what happens to high school songs with
tight T-shirts, feathered hair and no boyfriend
family gathering songs singing German on full stomachs
record store summer job minimum wage songs
camp counsellor songs that no one can stand any more
where do they go

what happens to the time that moves through you
that you learn to count in threes and fours
that you mark out on black and white keys
   in the steps between waking and sleep

what happens in the distance
from one note to the next


Wednesday, May 28, 2014

Berries



My mother squatted
in the heat, breathing
through contractions, filled

one last pail of perfect
sweetness for her mother-in-law
who, the day we left the delivery
room, would be wanting
fresh jam.

And every birthday,
when my mother
whips me up an angel
food cake with strawberries,

I imagine myself slipping out
between those tidy
rows of straw,

only the umbilical cord
around my neck
to hold me together.  


I'm not sure where I'm going with this. Other than incredulity at my Oma for forcing a 9-month-pregnant woman to pick berries. (And I wasn't actually born until she got to the hospital, but I was born with the cord wrapped.)

Tuesday, May 27, 2014

untitled inspired by Native Health's Cancer Care Photo Voice Project

untitled

mother how you echo through my life
each day that you are gone the sound of your voice fades a little more
the feel of your cheek on my cheek        so long ago
yet lately time is on speed        it is hurling me towards you
but I put the brakes on        take multi-vitamins
daily walks to ward off an early death
I don’t want my son to be motherless
without you I wandered in and out        weaving a life
but like my knitting there were holes I could not fix
so each night I unraveled it all        tried to start over
without you        there are holes
I cannot fix        without you I am a motherless adult
child of Lorraine Emily Denham        granddaughter of Jonina Buason
your mother and I share a name                but she had 17 children
I had one but wanted two        remember momma how you came to me
in my dreams        how you sat on the chair by bed to comfort me
when I lost my girl        a daughterless mother         a motherless daughter
I have no reflection           yet there are echoes of you everywhere
in picture frames you smile        still    inside I long to feel you
I walk a tightrope between you        and the death that is calling to me
I walk a tightrope between you and my son        between you and my disappearing daughter
and then my son smiles        holds up his tomato plant and I see you
shining in his eyes        you offer so many clues
that you are not gone        you still echo throughout my life

Refilled


Jaws open, wide O sheeted
with rubber dam pegged onto teeth.
Earplugs, stuck in to shut out 
metallic grind and scrape,
don't. Tipped back in the chair,
pressure of gloved hands,
water-spray and Darth Vader hiss
of suction hose. Drill exchanged
for drill, changing pitch
from whine to snarl.
Next the rubber-cement reek
of composite quartz-plastic goop.
Better than the old kind, 
hardened with a UV wand, 
thick purple light-finger.
Bite down now and still more
grinding. Bite again— all right?
Exit with puffed cheek,
drooping lip. It's better
than a piercing ache, hard yank,
a bleeding gap. It is. It is.

Daddy's girl



When my dad dies
my vote will no longer
cancel his.

When my dad dies
the men pointing
infected needles
at daddy’s girls
around every corner
will fly away
with the fairies
in shared sadness
that no one remains
to believe.

When my dad was a boy
he drove a motorcycle
off the barn roof.
I loved him then.

When my dad married my mom
he said let’s keep this simple.
She agreed, but
in a moment of weakness
opened her legs
and let me out.

Saturday, May 24, 2014

in declension


Working backwards



8 am The pastor answers but takes me for a drunk needing charity
7 am The teddy bear I took from your bed falls without a sound
6 am Sheets tangle around my feet
5 am Pink tablets meant for nausea spin me in heavy arms of grey
4 am My eyelids cannot block the fluorescence of your cheek
3 am I slur your name again and again
2 am I don’t know how I made it from your cold body to my bed without waking
1 am So this is what you will look like when you die