Friday, November 30, 2018

Two Runners, Four Runners


Two runners traveling around the city
On foot can have in depth conversations.
Even when the wind rushes by in noisy gusts 
The conversation is rarely disrupted.
Sometimes the runners must shout,
But their banter continues undeterred.
When the number of runners increases
From the number required to play war
To enough to play bridge
Filling the seats at a card table,
The conversation can be more varied
And the experience can be differently fulfilling.
The conversation can involve
The entire company of runners
With more opinions and knowledge informing
What is discussed.
But when the sidewalk is only wide enough
For two abreast
And the noisy wind blows strong from our left
Pushing us toward the water to the right,
The words of either pair are lost to the other two
As the soundwaves are blown wildly away
To float into the sky and join the ripples
Of the water in the harbor.
So, the conversation can continue
In any of six possible pairs.
The joy of the group of four compared to two
Is not double because there are twice as many runners
Or six times as there are that many more pairs.
In fact, it can’t be quantified
But the joy can be differently magical
With so many different ways to share
To light the way and
To lighten the hearts that pump the blood
Into four pairs of lungs
To provide oxygen to power the muscles
In four pairs of legs to move the runners
In unison around the city.
Four lives joined in harmony at sunrise,
Warming like the air as the sky grows lighter,
Carrying the energy of the sun
Like the flowers of the summer
The cold bodies remember from many other runs.

Wednesday, November 28, 2018

Sun, Clouds, Love


Deep pink at the horizon,
      Burnt orange above,
That one pointed out,
                  More of a peach color
                  In the next layer in the sky,
And finally darker colors
High in the sky
                              As we run along the harbor
        Early on a cool but not cold
                              Mid-fall morning. 
As the sun comes up
And the air warms,
      The colors turn
      To shades of baby blue
                Streaked across the sky,
As another observed.
Our conversation was as warm
As the rising sun
      And as varied
As the colors across the sky.
And throughout the morning
      There were wispy clouds,
      As the third noticed.
Early on, small clouds on the horizon
Like the bodies of little bugs
With many legs under them.
Later, spanning the entire sky.
Light and airy clouds,
Not bringing rain,
But making art in the sky.
Out conversation was light
And carried the art of life
Like the clouds.
A beautiful morning
For beautiful friendships
And wonderful conversation
About our many colored
Sometimes wispy lives.
But one thing is not wispy
But serious as all get out—
How we treat friends and family
With the love like the sun and clouds show
For life on the earth.

Monday, November 19, 2018

Instinctive Hunting


My creamy coated dog, China, and I,
Went for a long pre-dawn walk,
On a crisp November morning,
Under the stars that outline
An imagined hunter named Orion.
On the walk, she would stop and sniff
What seemed like everything.
I wondered what instincts
Were running through her mind.
Tracking a salmon in a stream in some past life?
Hunting the rabbits and squirrels
In our postage-stamp sized back yard?
Following the foxes that run through
Our residential neighborhood almost daily?
There is no way for me to know,
But it prompted me to think about
My instincts.
Do I even have instincts?
Are my instincts to be a hunter like Orion?
That is a thought that makes me laugh,
And would probably do the same for family,
And all the friends I call chosen family.
I’ve been told I overthink everything
And find it impossible
To draw things to conclusion.
But, in a way, I am a hunter.
Just not hunting game like Orion.
My brain is always hunting for answers.
Reflecting on things that have happened
To me and to those I call family.
Pondering how they are all connected.
Pondering ways to make
Deeper and extra connections.
Not just to hunt for today.
But to create a multiplier effect of betterment
For all my tomorrows
And the tomorrow of those around me.
That is my instinct.