Poetry and Prose by #1 Amazon Bestselling Author of Nature Speaks of Love and Sorrow, Co-Author of #1 Amazon Bestseller, Wounds I Healed: The Poetry of Strong Women, and Jan/Feb 2022 Spillwords Press Author of the Month
This post officially concludes the Nature Speaks of Love and Sorrow: 30 Poems in 30 Days Collaboration. Thank you to all of the exceptional writers and friends that took part in this collaboration. It was an honor to write with you.
And, thank you to everyone that participated in the 30/30 collaboration by reading, liking, and commenting on the poems shared. I still have some poetic responses to share, and will share them in the weeks to come.
Announcements
I am excited to announce that I am working on a new collaborative project for 2023. I will begin to communicate the details of this new project in the next two months, with more being shared when we enter the new year. Please stay tuned to this site for more information about this new initiative.
I am also going to begin a weekly prompt sometime in the next month, once I rest and recuperate from the 30/30 collaboration, which means that my blogging schedule will reduce to 3 to 4 posts a week going forward.
I am pleased to announce that my poem, Plum Trees, is now available at MasticadoresUSA. Thank you to Gabriela Marie Milton, and the team at MasticadoresUSA for their continued support and for publishing this piece.
Lilac and Mint
I walk toward the moon lilac and mint waft through the night a fragrance
bruising my heart, and hard to define
itโs youโฆ
I would be honored if you would go here, and read the rest of my poem. Thank you!
The trees have ruddy cheeks after a season of heavy drinking, but as rays and rains retreat, a skeletal hand beckons me to lie in shadow below my favorite tulip tree, amidst the signature pattern of DNA forestry.
If I escape into unknown dark, a place sunlight can never hold, will knowledge be bestowed from the underside of limb and branch? I duck and take a chance, besides enlightenment never trickles. It is always avalanche.
The bark, a sort of braille, is a hidden language, and by touching it we speak, myself and ancient tulip tree, sharing spells through silent system, wrinkled body โgainst wrinkled hand. Is that not real wisdom?
The Flush of Fall was inspired by the poem Limbs and Leaves. You can read more of K.โs poetry at Yard Sale of Thoughts.
I am not jealous of the rocks that dwell deep in the ocean bed they have nothing to covet; nothing to look forward to (scoff) but for sore backs from laying stiff under kelp beds in seagrassโ as threshing sea-doormats โ and perhaps of sand in their eyes but I suppose Iโm predisposed to how heavy its shoulders must be when my avant-garde gauge is the emptiness I suffer after yet one more mate left my bed I met a starfish at the shore the other day when my shoulders were laden with pity and boy, was I surprised with the story she shared! she named a rock in the intertidal zone that dreamed about being a rock in Mt. Everest where heโd lay under a female Juniper tree in the forested zone, no less, to wait for Juniper to drop him her berry-cones
โDonโt ask,โ the pink starfish exclaimed, rolling her eyes before she continued, โbut he is lots of fun and such a loving rock; everyone respects himโ we hope to keep him grounded and curious. We cannot make him change, but we can make him grow aware of his unrealistic expectations,โ she said, and then she left with the tide shouting I-donโt-know-what at me and that sheโd write her rock a love poem How curious, thought I of the soliloquy that even rocks have dreams to profess curious-er still about the rockโs recklessness to plant ideas into the heads of sea stars Is that what lifeโs like at the bottom of the sea?
Today I met a rearing Adรฉlie penguin pair hit with a dire dearth of rocks to stealโ they have their eyes on the stones at the bottom of the oceanic crust but by golly, those are unwieldy and immerse too deep to even try โWeโre the pebble poachers in these lands,โ the female told me, โwith brave dreams of getting our hands on those stones.โ โStones that just lay on sea bedsโ doing nothing,โ offered the male. Then, just as they came, they ran off to write each other love poems. I nodded, supposing I understood their plight. Is it thievery when this couple could put those rocks to good useโ and grant the rocks a purpose to be? All for the sake of their offspring?
As I trudged home, my shoulders felt lighter I didnโt know I didnโt knowโ but now I know! Thinking hard about being jinxed by getting the feted short end of the stick in life which amounts to not having someone to cohabit my bed with at night Is my qualm due to quixotic expectations? Do I need more lessons from the sea? Perchance now Iโm more ready to give it one more try Iโll start today by writing to myself a love poem.
Gift From The Sea was inspired by the poem Oceanโs Rocks. You can read more of Selmaโs poetry atSelma.
I am sharing one more collaborative response poem tomorrow morning, and then will post one of my poetic responses each day the rest of next week, which will make 30 days in a row of poetry for the Nature Speaks of Love and Sorrow: 30 Poems in 30 Days Collaboration.
Thank you from the bottom of my heart to all of the amazing poets that participated in this collaboration, and to all of you for being here, reading, liking, and commenting on the posts. Itโs been so much fun!
Stay tuned to this blog for a Nature Speaks of Love and Sorrow: 30 Poems in 30 Days Collaboration wrap-up post, and for details about my next initiative, by monthโs end.Thank you.