Acceptance
Thursday, May 19, 2022
Six Week Writing Course has Begun
Monday, May 16, 2022
Poetry by Glenda
In this place where all is fresh,
the sun would shine through gentle rain.
before it could freeze a single rose.
In a land of new beginnings, only joy
would make us weep. No hurt, no pain
would scar our thinking capability.
We’d leave it all behind
like the wake of a ship on blue seas.
I wish there were a place like this
where mourning ceases to exist. I’d go
there, never leave. I’d breathe the pristine
atmosphere, feel healing flow through me,
shedding uncertainty like a chameleon sheds its skin.
Wednesday, April 27, 2022
Writing Your Memories
Thursday, April 21, 2022
This is my story so far.
Monday, April 11, 2022
Poetry Month and my poetry here
Sometimes I forget the years before spiraling
darkness took its toll. Now aging wraps me in
silken threads, squeezes me into a box.I forget until a whirlwind, half my age,
delves into my life. Her purpose, unclutter
my house, my life, set me free of the past.
I forget until she tells me 2005 was long ago.
It’s yesterday to me. She brands my computer
an antique, like me, I suppose.
Floppy disks? Does anybody still use them?
She tosses them in the trash. What can she know
of such things? I saved precious words on those disks.
I am saddened by the pain she has yet to face.
Her biggest loss so far – a breakup with her boyfriend.
Six years gone now, I kept his voice on the answering machine.
Friday, April 8, 2022
Stop The Trees From Growing published by Your Daily Poem

But I came here today, to where Mother nurtured
my spirit and where Daddy kept the roof over my head;
where the fire warmed my bed at night when winter winds
howled ‘round the corners of the old frame house –
when this flat farm with ponds and pines was home.
The road that once the school bus traveled
taking me to spend the day
with someone who was not my mother,
looks like a highway to a place I’ve never been.
It’s not the buildings all torn down, the homes of friends
that now hold dreams of families I don’t know –
It is the trees.
Nothing stopped the trees from growing, growing ever taller,
till they dwarfed the house, the barn, the backyard –
now a tiny garden towered over by a lilac tree,
an oak, and one longleaf pine.
I traveled from what is and has been home for fifteen years,
to visit that which was but is not my home anymore.
Like you, Thomas Wolfe, I can’t go home again.
I can’t go home because that place I once called home is gone.
Forever gone, except in memories that linger like lazy chimney smoke
spiraling through my mind, thoughts that surge a yearning deep within
to hear the laughing voices, see the kindly eyes – stilled voices, loving eyes,
closed under sod upon a quiet hill.
This poem was published in 2019 by Jayne Jaudon Ferrer who is the owner of Your Daily Poem.
Jayne does a great job, too.
Wednesday, April 6, 2022
a Poem by Scott Owens
On The Days I Am Not My Father
by Scott Owens
I don’t yell. I don’t hold inside
the day’s supply of frustrations.
My hands stay open all day.
I don’t wake tired and sore,
dazed from senseless, panicking
dreams. On the days I am not
my father I hold my son
when he cries, let him touch my face
without flinching, lie down with him
until he falls asleep, realize
that just because he has a sharp tongue,
just because he’s sometimes mean,
just because he’s smarter than me
doesn’t mean he’ll become my father.
On the days I am not my father
holding you is enough until
holding you is no longer enough
for either of us. I listen well.
I let things go unfinished,
in an order I didn’t plan.
My mouth is relaxed. My teeth
don’t hurt. My face stays
a healthy shade of pink all day.
On the days I am not my father
I don’t fill the silence with my own
irrational rants. I don’t resent
the voices of others. I don’t make fun
of you to make myself feel better.
On the days I am not my father
I don’t care who wins
or loses. The news can’t ruin
my day. I water plants.
I cook. I laugh at myself.
I can imagine living without
my beard, with my hair cut,
without the fear of looking
too much like my father. On the days
I am not my father I romp
and play, I don’t compare myself
with everyone else, the night
is always long enough, I like
how much I am like my father.

