Friday, July 21, 2023

Anybody’s Poem by Gavin Spanagel


Anybody’s Poem 


What to hold onto

            Vs.

What to touch

What to soak

What to brush

What to ignore

What to go for

What to save

What to spend

Anyone could have 

written this poem.

 

June 2, 2023 by Gavin Spanagel

Acorn Dreams by Gavin Spanagel


 Acorn Dreams


Do acorns dream

With open eyes

Longing for limbs

Believing in leaves?

What’s under their cap

An itch to bark?

A cool patch of earth

To stretch roots

Acorn dreams on.

 

June 2, 2023 by Gavin Spanagel

Monday, July 17, 2023

Ask Me What I Know of Blue by Maureen Teresa McCarthy

Ask Me What I Know of Blue

 

I’ve got the blues the lady sings

Give me blue mountains not a gold ring

Blue days and blue rivers

Blue water running to the sea

Blue pines and blue jays                     

Blue haze and blue cheese 

Blue dusk and blue dawn 

Blue blessing and sorrow

Blue of all tomorrow

                                                

All this blue and water 

Sliding through my hands

No longer blue but silver clear

Shifting as the sand

Bluebirds and blue moods 

Blueberries plump and sweet

Blue blood and a robin’s egg

My blue heaven 

Life on this blue planet

Blue infinity                                        

We are one in water every vein is blue

Blood beneath every skin 

Is all the same in you

 

Friday, May 5, 2023

Maybe In Another Life by Linda McIlveen


In another life maybe I would have been braver about challenging those who tried to convince me that I was who I wasn’tSteered my own course rather than sailing to the port those judgmental few had pre-determined was my destination. 

In a frame of mind that held confidence rather than self criticism, I might have done wondrous things for which I'd be respected, and rewarded for what I'd achieved. Rather than someone who allowed herself to be wounded and sidelined, by the ridicules of the past. 


A person ready to meet and be with that dreamed of man. The one whose hair would be dark as night  with eyes that shone with wisdom, humor, and reflected the sea and the heavens. The one who would recognize and love, the woman I’ve always thought I could be.  


Miracles and magic aren’t unheard of but rare. For me in this life, the belief is not yet gone, but fades away like memories, as more days pass. 


Maybe in another life, all this was or could have been. Maybe in another life, it still could be! 


Saturday, January 7, 2023

A Solemn Event by Karen Sorce


It was a solemn event, but one that mostly went unnoticed by other people.

She stood, holding in one hand something that had been important once upon a time. The other hand held the cold, metal railing.

For a long time, she was a statue, could’ve been sculpted in marble, a beautiful angel.

A chilling breeze came up, blowing her coat’s hood down, pushing strands of blond hair around her face. She ignored them. Ignored everyone and everything. Except for her thoughts.

If anyone had approached her, they might have been able to see the tears.

It was the wrong time of year for picnics and romps across the grass and over the rocks, through the trees. A few hearty parents and children were there, couples huddled together in some places. People were still walking, passing her by on Central Park’s famous Bow Bridge.

She could’ve told them about the history of it, built in 1862, a romantic meeting spot, a place where couples got engaged. Views of the Fifth Avenue skyline. It had been a special place for her, too…once.

She never felt unsafe there, walking miles through the park, watching the birds, breathing in the scents of the trees and grass that was hard to find in the City. The sounds of horses’ hooves as they clomped along, pulling carriages with tourists doing the traditional ride. She always felt bad for the horses. Felt it was somewhat of an abuse of the beasts, though most were certainly well cared for. Just like people.

The traffic on the Bow Bridge quieted. She held her hand out over the water, opened it.

She wasn’t sure which thing hit the water and disappeared first – her wedding band. Or her single tear.

 

Chestnuts By Terry Le Feber

What a delicious time of year to have a murder. The family all gathered around the roaring fireplace, Christmas Tree ablaze in lights and shiny decorations, wassail bowl filled in anticipation, when suddenly, mean old Chet falls dead, face down, into the roaring fire. 

The flames are so intense and large as if sent by the Devil himself. Before anyone can reach him, Chet’s clothes are aflame.

 

John and Jake, Chet’s two sons, grab his ankles and drag the corpse off the pyre and roll it up in a Persian carpet, extinguishing the flames.

 

Flames safely out, John rolls the smoking Chet onto his back and everyone stares down at the crispy critter who once was a father, husband, grandfather and the biggest philanderer within a five county radius.

 

Karen screams and points. “Oh my god! Look at his pants! Look at his crotch!”

 

“Hmmm,” says Bill, Karen’s latest heart throb. “Well, yes. It would appear he has now been cooked. As one might say, as the song goes, ‘Chet’s nuts roasted on an open fire’. Eh?”

 

Karen is now laughing uncontrollably and proclaiming, “The old bastard finally got it in the end. Right where he oughta… in old the storage locker!”

 

Bill, John and Jake quickly look down at their zippers, collectively vowing to keep their equipment ‘in the storage locker’.

 

Karen doesn’t care about Bill and the contents of his storage locker. She’s going dump him after New Year’s and head south and find a certain Cabana Boy. Why not? She inherits dear old Chet’s estate, or will, after her two brothers expire.

 

Later, the police come. As this was a death with the body being badly damaged, the coroner orders an autopsy and inquest.  Only then did it come out that old Chet had been murdered with a thin spiked cylindrical weapon. Possibly a woman’s hatpin?  But, no one present at Chet’s roasting was known to use or have such a device.

 

Karen had dumped her hatpin collection years ago. But, she did save one piece for a possible special occasion. The special occasion had now come and gone, taking Chet and his nuts with it. And, no one would ever find that special hatpin.