Because my birthday is on Monday, today is the day I'm celebrating with Tom. This morning we'll go out to breakfast at our favorite diner, then drive down to our favorite bird sanctuary and wander among the salt marshes and along the beach. Then home, and home stuff--for me, that will mean finishing the firewood stacking and maybe I'll doze in front of a football game--and eventually T will grill scallops for dinner. Low-key excitement, for sure, but speckled with the little things that have shaped our life together.
Here's a poem from the new book, which sums up how I've been feeling lately, at this point of ritual transition, at this hiccup in time--
in myself I am
not much to write
home about not much to remember
when you pass me on the road I
smile and drop my eyes it is easy
to be invisible I listen
for the sounds of love a passing
train the dark autumn
rain splashing in the gutters
squirrels and chickadees
flitting past my feet as if I were
a lamppost or a coffin
there is no world like one
that does not know you live in it
no age not dipped
in shadow and I am a scant
weight a brevity you
would not hear me whisper
in the night would not recognize
my shoes in the hall I am
the bronze in the snow the steed
beneath the general the
spider who will not weave
in spring and all the while
the clamor of the city rises
like a broken waltz trucks
bang past on the freeway
gulls scream in the parking lots
and I unseen slip along the potholed
streets bare-headed humming
a small song only I can hear
[from Dawn Potter, Calendar (Deerbrook Editions, 2024)]
1 comment:
First, happiest of days to you, today and every day! And then...that poem is purely wonderful. I read it as a way of sort of explaining the negative capability that Keats proposed; to be in the moment, fully. Beautiful. Brava, my friend. =)
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