GOOD FOOTING: A poem

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At twenty below the moon comes up
       in blue daylight; our mattress, dense with sleeping bags
and white feather pillows
belies any sense of warmth-slash- comfort.
(pretense): how we used to walk on
  white sand beaches, sandals dangling
from my fingers.
                                                         we lie chilled, flung beyond hope as

trees lean over the frozen lake.

this house, my paper-strewn desk, the thin-shelled walls,
                  cold-soaked we resort to energetic huddling, drawing knees to chest,
closing hands into fists (unlike prayer), while
the deepening fog rises by its own law.
thoughts arise and go unspoken
   there is the daily torpor, hibernations where
   talking is like the sun (scarce) and
    no blazing words can warm us, now.
we can’t plow out, so
 sucking stale air, we dig in
burrowing like wild animals, underground,
shivered, and wheeling our barrows of third-rate regrets
nosing its garbage, stumbling through snowdrifts
waiting, waiting for a chinook
to melt puddled ice and bring back
the light, and (all of) its gulping brightness.

 

0 thoughts on “GOOD FOOTING: A poem”

  1. Your poem is one to reread over and over, taking it in more deeply every time. And beautiful photos! It looks like a land for fairy tales. We had rain and warm temperatures yesterday that turned our gorgeous snow to mush and ice. Bummed…

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Welcome to the creative playground of Image, Sculpture, Verse.  I live in a river town nestled in the Chugach Mountain Range of Southcentral Alaska.

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