Grey Squirrel
The squirrel darts out
and skims the wheels
of the passing car. He lands
safely on the other side
to frolic among his kin.
I’m sure he cherishes
his life, but I wonder
does his narrow
brush with death
mean more to me than him?
Lisa Vihos
Sunday, January 18, 2009
Sunday, January 11, 2009
Poem of the Week #54
The Assistant
This poem appears in the summer of 2010 in the online version of Verse Wisconsin:
http://www.versewisconsin.org/issue103.html
REMOVED
This poem appears in the summer of 2010 in the online version of Verse Wisconsin:
http://www.versewisconsin.org/issue103.html
REMOVED
Sunday, January 4, 2009
Poem of the Week #53
The Key
One day
you rush out
your back door
and drop
your key
It drops into
the deep, deep snow
and you don’t know
its gone until
hours later
Or maybe
you lost it
many lifetimes ago;
wandering
from door
to door
since then, getting in
the best you can with
whomever opens
to you
One day
something, someone,
comes and melts the snow
around your door
and the key
is revealed,
shining at your feet—
a place you had trod
every day unaware that
the key
was there
all along, waiting
for your glance,
waiting for you—
home.
Lisa Vihos
One day
you rush out
your back door
and drop
your key
It drops into
the deep, deep snow
and you don’t know
its gone until
hours later
Or maybe
you lost it
many lifetimes ago;
wandering
from door
to door
since then, getting in
the best you can with
whomever opens
to you
One day
something, someone,
comes and melts the snow
around your door
and the key
is revealed,
shining at your feet—
a place you had trod
every day unaware that
the key
was there
all along, waiting
for your glance,
waiting for you—
home.
Lisa Vihos
Poem of the Week #52
How to Be in This World
Grow like the bent tree
that gladly redirects its arms
to accommodate wind and wire—
anything that stands in its way.
Fly like the torn flag
that is happy to let the breeze
tease it and display its charms,
faded though they may be.
Open like the lowly sponge
that does not guard its holes,
and let God soak through you. Then,
when you are squeezed, let God pour out.
For you are the permeable membrane
between heaven and earth. You are
the beacon and the guide post; your life,
love’s trajectory.
Lisa Vihos
Grow like the bent tree
that gladly redirects its arms
to accommodate wind and wire—
anything that stands in its way.
Fly like the torn flag
that is happy to let the breeze
tease it and display its charms,
faded though they may be.
Open like the lowly sponge
that does not guard its holes,
and let God soak through you. Then,
when you are squeezed, let God pour out.
For you are the permeable membrane
between heaven and earth. You are
the beacon and the guide post; your life,
love’s trajectory.
Lisa Vihos
Sunday, December 21, 2008
Poem of the Week #51
One Snow Day, Before Christmas
No school or work today, but I awake
early, while the others sleep.
I putter around my house,
put away a dish, shuffle some mail.
There are presents to be wrapped
and bills to be paid. There are poems
to be written. But I will bake something
sweet instead, string some Christmas lights.
I pretend I am God, taking care of my house,
adoring its imperfections.
I know that when my people sleep,
they are closest to me. I want them to rest
while I guard the house
against the raging storm of winter.
I prepare the day, so they wake fresh,
unaware I have been loving them in their dreams.
Lisa Vihos
No school or work today, but I awake
early, while the others sleep.
I putter around my house,
put away a dish, shuffle some mail.
There are presents to be wrapped
and bills to be paid. There are poems
to be written. But I will bake something
sweet instead, string some Christmas lights.
I pretend I am God, taking care of my house,
adoring its imperfections.
I know that when my people sleep,
they are closest to me. I want them to rest
while I guard the house
against the raging storm of winter.
I prepare the day, so they wake fresh,
unaware I have been loving them in their dreams.
Lisa Vihos
Monday, December 15, 2008
Poem of the Week #50
Regarding Mary
God wanted to come down to try some flesh,
an antidote to formless bliss.
He wanted to get with his creation.
Mary was one of those totally unremarkable girls
until God picked her out of the crowd, saying,
let’s use her, she’ll do. An angel came
and made a hole in the top of her head and God
poured himself in like a pitcher of heaven. She felt
her magnificence from above. She was not afraid.
When God emerged out her other end
nine months later in a pigsty, small and wrinkled,
his first thought was what the hell?
But Mary’s eyes were on the star. She saw
that there were animals to be blessed and kings
to be humbled. There were shepherds to be amazed.
There were disputations in temples
and adultresses to be saved.
There were disciples to be chosen.
There were little children to be gathered
and sheep and goats to be separated. There was
water to walk on and dead to be raised.
There were parables and betrayals and crosses
to bear. There was torture and death and a shy girl
who went forward anyway toward a broken heart.
There was a rising mystery, and a set of questions,
and among the many answers, her reply: be still
and unremarkable. Open your head to the sky.
Lisa Vihos
God wanted to come down to try some flesh,
an antidote to formless bliss.
He wanted to get with his creation.
Mary was one of those totally unremarkable girls
until God picked her out of the crowd, saying,
let’s use her, she’ll do. An angel came
and made a hole in the top of her head and God
poured himself in like a pitcher of heaven. She felt
her magnificence from above. She was not afraid.
When God emerged out her other end
nine months later in a pigsty, small and wrinkled,
his first thought was what the hell?
But Mary’s eyes were on the star. She saw
that there were animals to be blessed and kings
to be humbled. There were shepherds to be amazed.
There were disputations in temples
and adultresses to be saved.
There were disciples to be chosen.
There were little children to be gathered
and sheep and goats to be separated. There was
water to walk on and dead to be raised.
There were parables and betrayals and crosses
to bear. There was torture and death and a shy girl
who went forward anyway toward a broken heart.
There was a rising mystery, and a set of questions,
and among the many answers, her reply: be still
and unremarkable. Open your head to the sky.
Lisa Vihos
Poem of the Week #49
Thanking Atlas
O Atlas, I fear that none of us
have thanked you in a while
for holding up this heavy ball
of molten ore and air called earth.
We go about our busy lives
so unaware of all you do to shoulder
our dilemmas, sunsets, wars
and raging seas, and every plant
and creature who dwells upon the earth.
We were so light and spare in youth.
No doubt your burden has increased
in recent years. For one thing,
we were fewer and wore only sandals,
no steel-toed boots left marks upon Aegean shores.
No “Super-Size Me” issued from the oracle at Delphi.
No odious pollutants weighed down the atmosphere,
tearing holes in the ozone. To be sure,
there were onerous matters compounding the load:
rape and war and patricide to name a few.
But those people were the youthful ancients
who hadn’t yet worked out the moral code.
You could forgive them their foibles of the day
and were glad to hoist them and their troubles
on their merry way beside the chariot of the sun.
I imagine, though, you are getting rather tired
of us by now and our selfish neglect of your well-being.
It is a thankless task, it is, holding up the earth.
And if you should shrug, well, we’d be goners.
Perhaps, after all your years of dedication,
holding us safe on the mountain of your back,
we could find a way to hold down the fort without you for a day or two,
give you a break for a scotch and a massage, an evening by the fire.
Lisa Vihos
O Atlas, I fear that none of us
have thanked you in a while
for holding up this heavy ball
of molten ore and air called earth.
We go about our busy lives
so unaware of all you do to shoulder
our dilemmas, sunsets, wars
and raging seas, and every plant
and creature who dwells upon the earth.
We were so light and spare in youth.
No doubt your burden has increased
in recent years. For one thing,
we were fewer and wore only sandals,
no steel-toed boots left marks upon Aegean shores.
No “Super-Size Me” issued from the oracle at Delphi.
No odious pollutants weighed down the atmosphere,
tearing holes in the ozone. To be sure,
there were onerous matters compounding the load:
rape and war and patricide to name a few.
But those people were the youthful ancients
who hadn’t yet worked out the moral code.
You could forgive them their foibles of the day
and were glad to hoist them and their troubles
on their merry way beside the chariot of the sun.
I imagine, though, you are getting rather tired
of us by now and our selfish neglect of your well-being.
It is a thankless task, it is, holding up the earth.
And if you should shrug, well, we’d be goners.
Perhaps, after all your years of dedication,
holding us safe on the mountain of your back,
we could find a way to hold down the fort without you for a day or two,
give you a break for a scotch and a massage, an evening by the fire.
Lisa Vihos
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