Temperatures dipped
Here in San Antonio
Ninety to forty

From eyelids sweating
To stuffing ears with Kleenex
Texas is extreme!

Patchwork Prose and Verse
Today I am writing through the Open Write at http://www.ethicalela.com, where our host encouraged us to write Picture Book Poems.

My favorite picture book as a child was Tibor Gergely’s Great Big Book of Bedtime Stories, but the one story I loved more than any other was A Day in the Jungle by Janette Lowrey. My mother read it to me over and over, and I think back on this story about the fear that rises in a group and how so many of our fears mount unnecessarily. You can read it here: https://youtu.be/J5jrBfsHGA0
No Fear
There was no monster
howling and shrieking with rage
~just a friendly owl.
Today at http://www.ethicalela.com, Susan Ahlbrand is our host at the Open Write. She encouraged us to write palindrome poems, or mirror poems that use a forward and back pattern. I chose sleep. After having Covid, it takes a long time to shake the fatigue. All I want to do lately is sleep.

morning, wakening
naptime, midday siesta
bedtime: dreams ahead
Today at http://www.ethicalela.com, Susan Ahlbrand is our host of the Open Write. She encouraged us to write a poem to something about which we are passionate as our poem today.
Dear travel, you keep
me looking forward to our
next planned rendezvous!
Rockport last fall break
Salem witches, Gloucester whales
hopeless wanderlust…..
San Antonio
and Texas Hill Country this
break……where to next? -Kim

Glenda Funk, a February host at http://www.ethicalela.com’s Open Write, inspired us to write Kitchen Ghost poems, inspired by her own reading of Crystal Wilkinson’s poetry. Today, I write this poem in memory of my oldest living aunt, Jeanie Haynes, who died on February 2, 2022 at the age if 95.. She drank Dr. Pepper and loved her family!
Kitchen Ghostangels
Mine eyes have seen the glory of the coming of the Lord
Sometimes when I open the recipe box, the ghostangels march out to the
He is trampling out the vintage where the grapes of wrath are stored
strains of How Firm a Foundation and In the Garden, and I’m taken back
He has loosed the fateful lightening of His terrible swift sword
to the caramel and chocolate layer cakes hidden beneath the dented
His truth is marching on
silver metal cake cover to those kitchens in South Georgia where my ancestors
Glory, glory, Hallelujah…..Glory, glory, Hallelujah…….Glory, glory, Hallelujah
cooked chickens alive that morning and baked cakes with fresh-fallen pecans and
His truth is marching on …..
rolled red and green candied fruit in flour to put into our Christmas fruitcakes and
In the beauty of the lilies, Christ was born across the sea
sometimes I think of those dishes with the Cherokee Rose pattern along the edges
with a glory in His bosom that transfigures you and me
that once stood in the cabinet with all that carnival glass and milk glass some of which
as He died to make men holy, let us die to make men free
now lives here with me as I wonder about its next stop and sometimes I open an ice
His truth is marching on
cream sandwich and think of the time I ran past Meema to the freezer without hugging her
Glory, glory, Hallelujah
hello first and how that didn’t end well at all and somewhere in all of this, I know
Glory, glory, Hallelujah
they are still strong spirits who come at will and find their way back to Heaven through
Glory, glory, Hallelujah
their own timewrinkled handwriting on the cards in my recipe box
His truth is marching on…..




Today, Glenda Funk has inspired us to write Pedagogy Poems as part of the Open Write at http://www.ethicalela.com.
Pedagogical Travel
Pedagogical
leanings take us places to
see the world, to know
Geographical
footholds (On Clouds, size 7)
bring flat maps to life!
Cultural studies
immerse us in food, music
art, literature
Philosophical
beliefs propel wanderlust
to explore the world
Political lines
fade, humanitarian
connections strengthen
Kaleidoscopes of
understanding that far is
near, that there is here
Pedagogical
travel viewpoints empower
experiencers
Trailblazing footprints
discovering difference
is conceptual


Natural light
diffused through a window
is not a good lunch date.
A friend double-took a
look at my lip line,
so I daubed my mouth –
saw no napkin stain.
She did it again.
I found a
wayward whisker
(okay, a couple)
to pluck when
I got back
to the office.
We swapped seats
next time – my back
was to the glass,
and I saw
good reason
to keep that seat.
I came home
from work and
tossed my own can of
Pearlessence Bombshell
that absorbs impurities
while adding next-day
texture and volume,
now firmly resolute that
my dry shampoo days
are over.
So much
is seen
in a certain
slant of light.
Sharing their stories
Offering hope for miracles
God is still at work
They’ve known deep trenches,
dark alleys, places of doom
They know there is light
They know there is hope
When all seemed hopeless, God worked
miracles in them

This week’s topic on sharingourstoriesmagic.com is quiet. The golden silence sets the tone of the day for me. No radio, no tv…..medicinal space for reflecting and writing. Solitude. Peace. Stillness. Coffee.
Thanks to Slice of Life and SOS for giving writers space and voice!

Quiet
the whirr of the fan
faint hum of the fridge
quaint strum of the heat
whispery paper turning a page
flutter of leaves
on trees
in the breeze
hush of misty
soapy shower steam
a snore of a snoozer
a schnoodle, asleep
the peace of the house
without any stirring
save for one spoon
in the coffee I’m swirling
morning solitude savored, fleeting
moments of peace
……..before workday greetings

