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