New Moon

Full Moon, February 23, 2024. Ryan Moat.

With a new moon and the beautiful transition to autumn upon us, some poems for your week, month, moment. XX, Megan

September

draughts of cool morning air
carried on dry-sighing leaves
respirate, whispering: rest, stay,
plan, see, manifest, begin, in every
breath the order and
organization of Earth
are upon us as gardens bear
fruit, hay is left to cure,
baled in sun waning
warmly in late afternoon
fields of golden bristle,
summer to fall, denouement
to eight months of moons
new and full and new again
transitions cyclical, circling
in the darkening sky
just after the last gasp
of cerise light crests over the
western mountains at sunset
wind chimes low and resonant
toning oooooh-aaaaah, bracing
rush and sweep of air transmits
that ocher timbre of September

Wasatch Mountains, September 2024. Image, my own.

Temple
for Danny and Kat, with love, M

Come into the temple
of my love for
I am sure about
its beauty and its
strength

Come into the temple
of my love for strength
can also mean softness,
stillness, peaceful respite,
home

I’ve learned that lives
change so quickly, so
surely, that surety is
difficult to process, to
prepare

But one thing I am
sure of is that as
the sun sets and the
stars rise, I will love
you

Through the night,
and as the sun rises
on the next morn, in
communion with the coming
day

In shelter of our shared
humanity, loyalty,
commitment, love, and
serenity we weather
storms

Of life together,
centered as we enter
into the temple
of our
love

Book Room, August 2024. Image, my own.

V Yourself:
Violet and Verstue

vivacious
viridity
verve
visceral
vital
vulnerable
voluptās
virtu
verity
volant
vociferous
vehement
violaceous
varsal

Hay Bales and Timpanogos. August 2024. Image, my own.

Let There Be Joy

Let there be joy all
around you

Humming, thrumming
in the air above

Your body, the conduit
from the outside in

That electricity
of savoring the

Small, the ephemeral
first bite of a

Ripe peach the
stream as it licks

And leaps over
each stone, all things

Unabashed and still
known like the

Sun as it dapples
clouds and leaves

Each beam a special
reminder that life and

Love are meant for
you the first kiss

Of a new love fresh
on your lips

Double Rainbow over Strawberry Reservoir. August 2024. Jamie Hagan.

Audacity

Crescent Moon, Sunset, Waikoloa, Hawaii. December 2022. Image, my own.

Be Old

Not in the wizened sense
(but be that, too, if you are
vigor and strong chords)
you don’t have to be a sapling

or a sprawling hundred-year growth
the world, and you
are fascinated with all things
new, be old

and let some of the love that life has
offered you
seep through,
a sticky sap of belonging,

bright, amber scent of pine
to teach you
that in your bones
you can give your self moments

to sit in stillness
in silence
in the calm of the wind
out of the storm

be old
and look at lessons
that life has revealed
think about the continuum

of the world
with lenses, and circles
you’ve crafted of heart–
sinew and marrow

joy and sorrow
ache and pulsing
love, all experience.
don’t forget that molten

rock sometimes surfaces
from the core of the earth
because you need be both–
foundation and fire
be old and be new

Church Doors, doors from a church that were moved to a bookstore in Haarlem, Netherlands, January 2023. Image, my own

Bus

Today I saw your bus
Pull safely to stop at the
light on highway 40
and the tears just

spontaneously came
I was so happy you
were safe, you were
Home

Timpanogos and waning gibbous moon, yesterday, my commute. August 2024. Image, my own.

Attraction

It turns out
that attraction is real

I know this from a plethora,
a multiplicity
of experiences

but the most vivid is my high school physics teacher who explained that if you were to put two objects into space, in a vacuum, a gravitational attraction would eventually, inevitably be established, formed between the two objects

these two objects would attract one another
who knew?

Beach Huis, Noordwijk, Netherlands. January 2023. Image, my own.


The End From the Beginning

Endings,
they definitely aren’t my favorite.
A bird in the hand… they claim.
I’m better if some things never change.
A feather in a vacuum only acted on by gravity
Falls as fast as anything.
This fundamental of physics makes my head spin.
Like that janitor who left all of his fortune to the library where he shined the broken tiles day-in and day-out.
Here. Now.

Maybe this gift is just the beginning.

Orion, from my window. December 2023. Image, my own.

The Color Atlas of Galaxies

why do you purchase the color atlas of galaxies, cambridge press, for your child? with any other intent than to enable you and them to feel impossibly small. micro. insignificant. to be reminded of your own obsolescence. is it working? yes. you possess the color atlas of galaxies, cambridge press, so that you understand that if you are tiny, miniature, inconsequential as far as all existence is concerned you will begin to feel that your place in the universe is not unknown, it is confirmed. because, it turns out that in the english language, you should never put a comma after because, because this rule has been established by grammarians for a long, long time. before you were born. but it also turns out, that you don’t really need to worry about that, in the grand scheme of things because, you hope your students will never read your work, or call you out on your hypocrisy of punctuation. the best thing is that you’ve chosen this side-gig as a poet so you can really say f-it and look into a color atlas of galaxies, cambridge press.

Landscape Arch. April 2021. Image, my own.

Best Part

the best part is crop-
ing the hard stuff out
in favor of Earth’s beauty

Autumn on the Wasatch Back. Image, my own.

Reclamation

Greenhouse Damage, Hail Storm August 2024. Image, my own


Bill Murray

I remember the day I became Bill
My heart was breaking and I wanted
To save it, so I pulled it out through
The intercostal space between my ribs,
Right through the cage,
Careful not to catch it on my sternum
And I put my heart into a glass jar
Which I affixed around my neck with
A piece of twine, and I clamped the
Lid on tight and proceeded to live
To take baby steps
To walk around town
To ride the bus
Because I knew that if I could preserve
My heart
In that jar
I would make it
I would survive
My love would last
And others could see and understand
What heartbreak looks like
And how one lives through it
Now I understand about Bob,
“There are two types of people
In this world, those who love
Neil Diamond, and those who don’t”

Composition with Double Line [unfinished], Piet Mondrian

August

Something about August is begging to be paid attention. Be here as the gray storm gathers strength, the dark cumulonimbus clouds billow up to twenty-seven thousand feet, the hail batters the roof like an alien ice machine. Deluge. White pellets of rime nearly round and cuttingly hard tear through verdant gardens and iron city drains, pinking flower beds and translucent greenhouse roofs, pocking every possible piece of outdoor furniture and uncovered car hood.

Splatters of rain signal the reclamation of autumn as the scud clouds break from the shelf of the tumult over Mt. Wilson, tumbling as if they may make contact with the grocery store parking lot lines before turning into a fog that dissipates over the asphalt. The gale winds signal the return of fall in the rising apple-crisp air. Time asks if we’ll watch for a moment from the porch as another wind rollicks, racing through the pumpkin fields, wracking the sticky green vines against each other.

August asks if we can move so much more carefully, thoughtful of each precious moment through transition– lightning strike, cloud fall, thunder call. Glorious weathervanes snapping erratically this way then that, trying to keep up with the on-rushing squall. Can we pause and take in the smell of electricity like ozone and h2o, the brouhaha of late summer air. Drink it in.

Vøringfossen, Norway. July 2024. Image, Carrie Madsen

(Re)claim

the girl who ran in
dark canyons and
dry riverbeds when
she was young
she’s there
crunching gravel and
sagebrush under her
feet, up this next
steep incline to
the plains, the meadow
there in the stillness
a tiny creek burbles,
and a garden shed
appears with a low wind
chime, that girl,
she’s deep as a well
wide as an ocean
visceral and powerful
even then, in her
vulnerability, her desire
to love, she’ll find
that no one can
do that for her
love her like
she must love herself,
take that last sprint of the
trail right back home
reside inside herself

Evening Star, Georgia O’Keefe,

You Know

You know,
sometimes
as that little girl
bucktoothed
and freckled
you wanted
the come-up
cause you
believed
you deserved it

You know,
sometimes
you’re aware
that if you
get what you
ask for
everything
will change
again.
Like Alaska

you won’t
be able
to return
to the halcyon days
You know,
sometimes
you get caught
between your
growing and
your fragility

and, god, the
pain of it
can crush,
squeeze,
burn,
You know,
sometimes
everything gets
unstitched, unpicked
by the universe

and you’re reminded
that the old woman
at the end of the
world
must have needed
to tend her
soup
before it
scalded
she still needed

food, herself, she
still knew she
would be called upon
to (re)stich the
tapestry of earth
the raven unraveled
to feed the world,
to tend the soup,
we are her
magic and stories, too

Oregon Coast, August 2018. Image, my own.

Window

Aurora Borealis above Olga, WA. April 2024. Image, Chandelle Anderson

Window

frogs begin their night song, an ostinato
of B sharp, played by a perfectly
persistent string orchestra- thrum,
thrum, thrum, thrum-thrum

breeze leaks through each screen sieve,
gentle reminder of coming autumn,
for now summer sits contentedly on
her haunches relishing the heat of

day the song of night, the stars
that come out in lions and triangles,
teapots and scorpions, dippers and
dragons, cosmic miracles on display

like aurora borealis which
tossed up twice this year and
Perseid showers, a hundred fiery rocks
streaking Earth’s atmosphere each hour

High Uinta Wilderness, August, 2024. Image, my own

Threshold

Revelation comes on the wings of hummingbirds. I know because today in a sunlit meadow, I paused and sat to share the rhythmic pulse of living with ants, bees, dragon flies, song sparrows, dark-eyed juncos, yellow-rumped warblers, and one spritely calliope hummingbird who flew down through the tall pine and hung near a stalk of blue grama grass, looked at me, then double-zapped right back up into the tall trees.

Go there.

Joyous voladoras, whirring imperative nearly beyond human perception, almost impossible to grasp and parse at first message, pendulous for that instant—a breath a beat, fuchsia throat shuddering, then off to the elsewhere with sweet memos for others. There’s a portal that opens when you list to that murmur, that stir, that hum, that heart dispatch. It warmly beckons where you need to go.

Go there.

A susurration of tiny judders– things you know, you’ve learned, you’ve practiced, you’ve observed, you’ve lived—and always the rustling of the beyond. The change, the growth, the movement, the light, the enlightenment that hover just past the portal of the sentient carried on the quilled beak of this miniature message-bearer.

Go there.

This tiny gem of a creature invites us to step into the limen. Many times, the margins of our lives line up like archways in an M.C. Escher print. The path through the portals we walk feels exhaustingly ceaseless, unremitting. Yet, as we move through these portals, each shift, each growth, each change leads us to the doorway to new erudition. We see the final arch, sense the dawning strength of the open air, and pass through into an incredible landscape of unprecedented being.

Go there.

La Mezquita, Córdoba, Spain, 1937

New Ocean

I woke from another dream
last night and discovered that I
was on a completely new ocean,
another dimensional existence

both comforting, strangely peaceful,
and equally mystifying, to come to
epiphany that life has migrated to
new extents, reverberating on the astral plane

Phosphorescent Sea, M.C. Escher, 1933

Wish

if i could know what
the next episode would bring
i would be water

Rainbow over Helper, UT. Brenda Hattingh Peatross, August, 2024

Light

Cotton Candy Clouds, August 2024

Love

No one tells you that love and risk are synonymous.

This is a hard truth to bear in this world, I’ve found.

But people also don’t tell you that love comes in so many beautiful forms that perhaps the human tongue has never named or caressed or articulated them all– anima, amor, amatio, cupido, diligentia, ludus, eros, agape, pragma, philautia, zelo Love

Love forms the deepest connective tissues and threads of our psyche and souls– the circle that embraces us all, and this love is vast, sweeping, sublime, teeth– it is the sinew of the divine that runs through all living things. You Me.

It’s the why behind how washing the dishes and a sensual lie-in, lay in, lay on can be erotic. Simple.

That is the wonder of love. The musings that both bring us to our knees in gratitude as well as sorrow, pleasure as well as pain, transcendence and immanence. What shall we choose? Love allows us to stand at the edge of the universe of our knowing and unknowing.

Love

Set List from an Epic Music Fest, Ranch Rock III, 2024

Connaissances

Today my old life died
and my new life spawned

I had a tiny lump
in my throat

My stomach turned
a bit, and I

took a long, deep breath
through the pain

then I realized that I was
hungry for breakfast,

stomach grumbling, I went out
and ate and egg

Eden, Utah

Artist
You are the artist
of your soul, winsome and west
her and just so me

Gabrielle Dawe, Plexus 36

Ikigai

When you know things
When you understand and
Begin
to Evolve
and sure, you’ll
be erroneous again,
don’t forget that
there will always be
People
who will try to tell you
Otherwise
The sky is falling
for them, for sure
rather, Recognize that You
Know
that the sun is rising
You are not nothing
that you do
Exist
they are misinformed
Just as all the ideas
that have ever been flat
lines, no heartbeat

Crescent Moon, August 2024