

The Russian Ballet Book
I remember when I found the book at an old store
It was bound in green cloth and smelled of dust and ancient glue
I bought it for fifty cents
I was hungry for the understanding of things unknown
And you found me looking at it
Sitting on a log with my dirty feet near the fire to stay warm
You laughed because the book did not belong here
Amongst the pine trees, the aspens and our ignorance
So I took my book to my tent and read it by flashlight
As I read I secretly began dancing in the unknown
My world grew beyond the woods and the mountains
I wished to share my understanding with you
But your laughter was still ringing in my ears
So I spoke of the book with the trees and the river
And they kept my secrets
So I could keep pretending that I was like you
The Blue Carnation
I gathered my bruised knees to my boney chest,
And stared at a single blue carnation sitting in a plastic cup.
The flowerâs natural sweetness had been contorted with dyes.
A fair flower made ugly by the wishes and whims of some fool.
Suddenly it all made sense.
You had made me cry again with your âwell intentionedâ remarks.
âSo uneducated,â youâd say âIf you are not skinny and pretty, well thenâŠ.â
Always measuring my value by the width of my thighs and waist,
So that I began to hate things that I once loved about myself.
I pursued skin and bones, starving my body and spirit,
And I cried while I dug a grave for my brilliance and light to go in.
You had not enough back bone to simply ask for my allegiance,
So you brought me a blue flower in hopes that it would buy me,
And keep me minding your wishes and whims.
Ironic isnât it brother?
Every time I pass a blue carnation I remember the day
I sat staring at a gift you made to keep me under your boot.
I broke free instead.
That was the day I washed off your ugly colors and finally started eating again.
The Woods
I stood at the edge of the woods that I had known as a child
Seeking shelter amongst the great strong pines again
Under the boughs of such old friends I have never felt alone
Yet as I drew closer I could see clearly that the trees had grown apart
No longer leaning their limber heads upon each other
Their weariness found no safe resting place upon the shoulders of understanding
No longer gathering strength from their closeness and roots
They had grown independent and isolated and weak
Without their tent of branches the sun scorched the seedlings and dried up the fern
Their stubbornness made them brittle and the wind snapped them with ease
When one gave up and came crashing down there were no strong limbs reaching to catch their fall
And the great woods became a desert of confusion and complacency
And loneliness-
I came seeking shelter amongst the great pines again,
But these are not the woods I had known as a child.
The Desert
This is a desert in more ways than one-
Feeble hands plant daisyâs that wonât grow in sand,
That is to say, you have complacently accepted that what you plant will not grow
Even as you place seedlings in the ground you have already reconciled yourself to their failure
And I canât sleep because wilting flowers keep me up at night
So I travel to the Joshua trees and sage brush to gather white petals
From your abandoned stalks that I could never stop believing in
That is to say, I will go the distance to try and save what you have given up on
That I will believe in possibility and hope even when you shake your head at me
All the while my passion blooms in places you swore could not support pretty things
While you stay ever busy burying your legs in red ant hills
So you can complain that they bite your ears
That is to say, You like your misery so much that you tend it like a garden,
While the daisyâs you could have nurtured are left to burn in your ignorance.
THE FORGIVING POEM
Spent some long hours on my bruised knees.
Pleading for a bigger heart, please.
Used to keep my hate like a caged pet crow.
Before I bent the bars and freed my glow.
Before, I couldn’t look myself in my own gray eyes.
Afraid of mirrors that reflected dark rage and lies.
Until I felt my way through love like a book in braille.
Built a ship from compassion and then set sail.
And now rocks threaten to break my pretty ship.
I am unwillingly heaved back into the squall’s fierce grip.
New reasons emerge to choose hurt and bitter.
I can drop anchor and face the tempest or be branded as a  quitter.
I have not forgotten – Anger and unforgive once made me joy-broke,
And savage words on the tongue still makes my heart choke.
That black crow has come home uninvited.
I pray my heart has left no room for old enemies to be reunited.
Anger empties promises of justice and wholeness in my soul,
But I don’t bite forbidden apples or pay hates steep toll.
Wielding my words like a weapon felt ever wrong,
Until I let the softness make me ever strong.
Someone’s cruel words pour smoke into my blue skies,
Yet I have learned to use the heat of their fire so I can rise.
Take flight on wings made of forgive and I’ll land on my knees,
Thanking God for the let it go – heart that answered my long ago pleas.







Love ‘the book’ đ
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