Friday, May 8, 2026

Listen to the moon

Slings and arrows

were all I felt

in my ignorant

know-it-all youth.


I could shout at

a hot summer moon

from a ridgertop

as if it were God.


Hearing no breeze

no crickets, no answer

just the faint whisper

of far away trucks.


The tall grass bent

and crackled under my feet,

releasing the sweet aroma

of crushed ripening seeds.


The moon sailed up

to the top of it’s arc,

fell away, over the hills

that separated


me from the ocean.

I had to wait, I hadn’t

lived nearly enough

to get even a glimmer


of what matters

and what doesn’t.

I asked God in a prayer hastily 

scribbled on a scrap of paper.


And it’s been answered!

Many times, if I listen

to the wind and the moon

and the far away trucks.


To the crows flying

from treetop to roof top.

to the shrieks of children

in the playground down the street.


To the soft breaths

of my beloved as she

sleeps. Before the hawks

and turkeys awaken.


And the absence

of sirens is a blessing

that I pray could be shared

with all the sleeping billions.


Because sometimes

God answers with words

and sometimes with

a powerful silence.


Shalom, salam alaykum,

Peace be with you.

Yes, you heard me,

Listen to the moon.


 

Thursday, April 30, 2026

sugar and salt

I have delighted

to eat the stone,

the pink salt mined

in the Himalaya


I’ve not yet kissed

the Blarney Stone,

but I wonder if

my gab is a gift.


Or mere grist to be

ground in the mill

between the stones

of mind and soul.


The bones of this

world, gathered

and piled ready

for angry hands


to cast at the woman

who slept with one

who was forbidden.

Until they were stayed.


Deep in the heart

of mountains, the soul

of primordial forest

and fen, the coal


waits for the fire of

power and industry.

waits to blacken

the lungs of the men


who drill it and blast it

and haul it up from

its ancient grave

for the furnace.


One grain of sand,

perhaps from

a favorite beach,

trapped in a shoe


can be a torment.

Ten thousand grains

of sugar, a teaspoon,

a delight not unlike salt.

Thursday, April 23, 2026

Hide and seek

 Sometimes the fish

are all on the other

side of the boat.


One side yields

nothing while

the other holds


a net-straining bounty.

Like summer rain,

in the desert valley,


like gold nuggets

in the mountain river.

Seek and you shall find.


I used to catch

a lot of trout. I could

sense where they


hovered. Or so

it seemed. Maybe

I was just lucky.


But I never hit the jackpot

at the casino or picked

the winning numbers 


n the lotto. I bought

a single ticket every week;

never won a single dollar.


Perhaps I didn’t ask

the right question,

knock on the right door.


I caught a golden trout

in a lake two miles high

in the Sierra Nevada.


It was too beautiful

to kill and keep so I

released it and didn’t


cast another line for

nearly thirty years.

Now I’ve found


which side of the boat

the fish are on and

have asked the right


questions, knocked

on the right door and

what I’ve sought to find


remains a mystery.

As it should be, deep

in the waters of the lake


where the golden

trout swim,

beautifully.

Thursday, April 9, 2026

The Road to Emmaus

This road is old,

the surface cracked,

the grass that sprouts


there briefly green

before it withers

to gold. A caravan


of ants harvests

the seeds that have

fallen into the cracks.


They don’t see the

guided bomb that falls

upon the power plant.


Dust and ash tints

their backs from black

to sooty gray.


The thud of the

explosion knocks

the grains of wild rye


and barley from their jaws

and collapses the tunnels

and corridors of their


carefully constructed

sand palace underneath

the cobbles of the road.


They just resume

their tasks of moving

grains of sand and seeds.


By sundown, the passages

and storerooms have been

repaired, their cargo stowed.


Two people walk along

the road discussing what

has happened, what


they have seen and heard,

fearful of the noise and heat

and the promised peace


that hasn’t closed the breach

between prophesy and what the

powerful call “facts on the ground.”


A stranger joins them and

points out the ants, the facts

that persist underground.


The lowly ones don’t ask,

they shake off the dust,

continue their tasks.