It was a day where nothing seemed to go the way I expected.
You see, the first thing I do every morning is make a list of tasks. Then, I prioritize those tasks, from "Absolutely HAS to get done today" to "Get this done some time in the next six months." From library work to teaching, everything seemed to take longer, be more complicated, than anticipated.
Sharon Olds misses her friend . . .
The Winter After Your Death
(for Katie Sheldon Brennan)
across the snow
narrow slowly.
The sun closes her gold fan
and nothing is left but black and white–
the quick steam of my breath, the dead
accurate shapes of the weeds, still, as if
pressed in an album.
Deep in my body my green heart
turns, and thinks of you. Deep in the
pond, under the thick trap
door of ice, the water moves,
the carp hangs like a sun, its scarlet
heart visible in its side.
Olds' elegy for her dead friend is quite moving. If you read my post from yesterday, you know it celebrated the birthday of my friend, Helen. Helen passed a few years ago, but she is still all around me daily. I opened a poetry book from my shelf today, and inside the cover was a card from Helen, written in her beautiful cursive. ". . . And Happy Easter!!! Rebirth, new beginnings, replenishment."
Even though today didn't go according to plan, I didn't have a bad day, It just wasn't what I expected. There's that word again: expect. Expectations, as I wrote a couple days ago, generally lead to disappointments. However, I wasn't disappointed or upset today. I was just . . . okay.
Recently, the best part of my day has been occurring at lunch--it's my apple, which has been filling me with a great deal of satisfaction. That may sound really simplistic, but who says that happiness has to be fireworks and marching bands all the time? Sometimes, all you need is a really sweet, juicy apple. I know my friend, Helen, would have agreed with me on this.
Saint Marty wrote a poem for today about his apple, using the following prompt from The Daily Poet.
Brainstorm ten words that come to mind when you think of snow and ten words that come to mind when you think of oil. Write a poem that uses a word from the "snow list" in the first line and a word from the "oil list" in the second line. Continue doing this until you have used all (or most) of the words.
Apple Ode
by: Martin Achatz
I press my lips to your cold
skin, lick until you're slippery
as an icicle in spring, tender
flesh sweet as a baby's milky
breath against a tundra of breast.
O apple, the orchard where Tin Man
stood frozen in rust, in need of
lubricant against the witch's curse,
is a blizzard of you, so tempting
to Dorothy she ignores the black
sulfur drifting through forest air
in a vinegary haze, reaches up
to pluck one ruby fruit from a dry
stem, bite an olive-sized piece
off, let it plow her tongue's field.
Perhaps the witch, with her petroleum
robes and permafrost heart, would
change her mind about needing
those slippers if only, O dear apple,
she sampled your white honey's
sticky friction, let it flood her body
the way her flying monkeys
flood the emerald heavens.