I love people who frame their puzzles
and hang HOME upon their walls
I love the people who are never quiet
even as night-time falls
I love the people I call family
as right as any blood
I love the fam’ly of my heart
who love me like they should.
I love people who frame their puzzles
and hang HOME upon their walls
I love the people who are never quiet
even as night-time falls
I love the people I call family
as right as any blood
I love the fam’ly of my heart
who love me like they should.
I’ve thought about your chronological timeline of our relationship that you wrote with such attention. I wish I could see it like that. The absence of our relationship during the lean years of our emotional lives burdens me to this day, but not how you may think.
With your guidance, perhaps I’d have avoided some of the pain I endured because I refused your matriarchal wisdom. Without you, I kept myself small so that others, undeserving/saints, could shine their sins/lights through me, the prism child. The magical being you brought into this world. With my life reborn here, you’re not losing me, you’re gifted with the light’s rebirth in my spirit. It burdens me because I couldn’t shine for you like I shine here. Know that in my heart of hearts, I am but a reflection of those around me, and around you, I’m at my most glorious.
You wrote of us breaking apart in our relationship, but Mama, this is how I roll. I realize this with Ben and my marriage. I love that man ridiculously. I wish him not a lick of harm which is why I’m away from him. He couldn’t give me what I needed right now.
This was not personal against you, although I recognize how it could feel that way. Perhaps feeling like you’re not enough to keep my heart. As I stated above, it’s because of you that I felt brave enough to step out into the world. It’s because of you, I felt the confidence to face my darkest fears. No ordinary person could love like you, my mother, my heart, my love. You make mistakes, but man, so do I.
This, my beloved mother, is how I want you to know I love you. You’re not a saint, but you’re an angel in a meat suit. I think the world of you even when you’re doing what I call mundane things. Things I’ve seen you both do for a million years; Things that make me want to have a more musical life (like a real musical, not just singing (Hit song quality)). Ones where the true feelings pour out of the mouths of people like you and me in a harmony that is strictly our own. Like the Loon song you sing with Dad, the familiar feel of three-word arguments and ribs with deep gouges from elbows.
Please read this with an open heart so that I can snuggle up inside and feel the safest I ever feel. Allow me to cuddle up against your memories like when we’d watch TV on the couch and I’d get the knee because I was the oldest. How I’d fall asleep on your hip and don’t ever remember waking up. I want to remember how it felt to know I was protected like I feel now.
I know I’m not what you expected or maybe even hoped for. I’m loud, cuss a lot, think nakedly, don’t filter frequently, but I’ve tried so hard not to break your heart or disappoint you. It’s a reason I stayed as long as I did. It’s a damn good reason to stay. That’s not blame, that’s recognition for the truth you showed me through your calming words when I freaked out over stuff that, truly, should never have happened or been said, but there it was and there you were with the dustpan to help me sweep up another mess.
As I sit here in my living room writing this on the computer I’m still paying for, I can’t help but be grateful for the many things you’ve allowed me to achieve with your generosity. You’ve helped me commit to things I was busting buttons proud to do. You helped me realize I’m okay and worth it even when everything went south before I did. I don’t know the right words to express how deeply I adore your generous heart. You are far more trusting of your intuition now that you’re older. I admire the growth I’ve seen since returning as a significantly different person than I knew.
I want this to be a letter that you cherish. If it’s anything but, please let me know. Every intention of these words on the page are to convey to you how very deeply, truly, and completely I adore you.
With deepest devotion, your daughter
Mare Helen
My body, this I be (My country tis of thee)
Peace, Joy, Affinity, (Sweet land of liberty)
Youth’s fountain springs (Of thee I sing)
Blood on my mother’s thighs (Land where my father’s died)
Gifts of our sister’s sighs (Land of the Pilgrim’s pride)
At every hearth reside (From every mountainside)
“Hestia, we sing!” (Let freedom ring!)
My soul was lost, floundering without purpose
Gypsy feet wandered human nature
The Sedona Red Rocks of Arizona
Showed me the intense beauty of desert isolation
Reflecting my sun glared eyes
Sunburned skin – husk of an old life shed
Revelation of the raw and openly scored spirit
My feet turned towards the forest loam
I walk deeply, mindfully, into the Ponderosa stand,
Dripping regrets onto needles that violate
My feet and legs, creating a tenderness
That feels like Christmas morning
I climbed mountains to witness the freedom
Of flight
But found the rocks resistant to my wings
Forbidding me entrance;
With courage forged in the fires of trauma
I ascended.
Flinging myself into the swirl of eddies
That couldn’t hold me
I plummeted into the icy, unforgiving river
Where I forded from embankment to water’s edge
Directionally challenged as I
I fight against the rushing waters
Until I’m exhausted and finally relent
To the inevitable flash flood of grief
It washes me onto the shores
Of the roiling ocean waves
Under a full moon gleaming
In sacred silence
I left immediate footprints of ideas,
Beliefs, and yet more solitude of a different depth
The winds of change hurricaned me east
Lessons abandoned, like me,
At the foot of the Great Smokey Mountains
Phoenix-like, I refused my ashes
Reconstituting in my power
Hear me, my friends, those who feel outside
Those who feel forgotten or invisible,
Those who feel created to endure tribulations
Those who arrive precisely on time
Into my company: exhausted, panting, sweating
Sopping in voracious victory
With reciprocal love we bond
Dancing with wild abandon
Intermingling
Pressing our heartbeats together
In loving embraces
With you I’ve found my way home.
Mother God, benefactor of all that is holy.
You have led us to this place together as a community and bound us to one another through faith.
In the beginning of this Advent season, may we remember your unexpected appearance among us in the birth of a child.
You make yourself known to us again and again but we sometimes are deaf and blind to you. Help us to clear our ears and open our eyes to your word
God of Peace, whose ways are not our own and whose coming among us cannot be predicted, we dare to welcome your surprises, seeking to be awake and alert, and to fully embrace the unexpected. That we might be changed by your appearance and transformed into loving vessels with radical acceptance.
Now let us feel your presence as we live as you taught us and pray as you taught us: Lord’s Prayer

My “Silent but Deadly” litany chants in my head
“Don’t open your throat, let the demons be fed”
I want to reach out. I want to be heard. But…
Reality isn’t where I want to be disturbed
My brushes lay colorless, lifeless as corpses
My observances from the corner, bodily divorces
I’m running like hell hounds know my name
The bridges start smoldering in fingers of blame
and they all return to me. Their rejection is plain to see
If I’m not them, I’m never good enough as me.

I won’t mourn you while you’re still here making choices;
choices of where you’ll breathe last when the time comes
decisions that are yours, and only yours, to make. Always.
I will, however, laugh with you until you can’t any more.
I will support your choices, defending your life at its last.
You’re not old enough to go, but I know that’s not up to us.
I won’t mourn you while you’re here, but I will love you,
my friend, brother to my sister-in-heart, brother of my brother.
The sugar cookie pink dogwood sprinkles bridal paths;
creating instant asphalt chapels.
The scent of innocence found in clover and black walnuts
admire the buttercups, grape hyacinths, and forget-me-nots
I inhale the pastel afternoon of 72 degrees, skirt weather
rising sun peeking the treetops looking for reflections
The yellow skin blanket warms the earth,
nurturing the robins, crows, and a fashionable pair of bluebirds.
In the dark margarine yellow window boxes,
purple pansies assort themselves presentably.
There are four square pillars looking like an estate;
updated but settled into a routine of security.
A squeal of young girls holding a picnic at the curbside
interacting by taking turns instead of having a leader.
They worked in tandem, familiar with their abilities.
A nap in a hammock sounds incredibly plausible, but
I return to the silence of a squeaky cat and gentle spirit
This is a time for lasts, as we say goodbye,
but this is also a time for intensely real firsts.
A time when the reflection upon our own mortality
comes to the forefront, peeled away into puddles of grief.
The firsts that haunt the memories
are those that ask, “How can the birds be singing?
Why does the traffic keep moving?
Don’t they realize my world just stopped?”
Like a delicate flower praying in amber
First, there are the beginnings found only at the ends,
then there are the lasts that can only be found
looking in the rear view mirror
as the year of firsts steps forward
begins.
When it first comes home that there isn’t any
physical shell to go sit with,
to hold hands with,
or look into their eyes on this day or any more other days,
the comprehension of our provisional lives
settles like “dust-we-meant-to-get-to-until-things-changed.”
The sound of their breathing or their laughter
has begun to fade and yet, they show up
unexpectedly fully present as echos of last being.
What they don’t warn anyone about
are the May 4ths, the June 13ths, and the October 27ths.
The ordinary, every day chores laden heavily
with surprisingly unpredictable waves
The first meal alone, knowing they aren’t there.
Using the last of the coffee you bought
on your last shopping trip when you didn’t know;
While there was still hope you would shop again.
Packing the clothes they used to wear catching
a whiff of their cologne
that sparked the memory of their hugs.
The realization that along with your firsts,
you also experienced unwittingly, your lasts.
All of the things that seemed so mundane,
ordinary when they were around,
even through challenges,
suddenly become
…absent.
And although they never leave us
their love woven into our cloak of shared life,
everything seems suddenly out of sync;
off kilter; out of phase,
unraveled.
When we think of the deaths of our people
The ones we knew inside and out,
We brace ourselves for the celebrations
because we’ll go through the motions
We’ll go through the first motions of knowing
with all of our people, but one, we’ll be grieving.
Whispering ‘Bless their hearts” reverently,
We’ll be eating funeral sandwiches,
served in hushed tones after the nice service.
We’ll make motions of Christmas, Thanksgiving,
their birthday, your birthday, and the first anniversaries.
It’s the days of confetti we go to like holy sacraments
feeling gawked at and sacrificial; awkwardly naked.
But smiling politely with a discreet exit
helps to survive through the first holidays.
This is a time for new beginnings, letting go of goodbyes
but this is also a time for honoring that which has been before
A time when the reflection upon our own mortality
comes to the forefront, inspired by the love
which brought blessings and comfort throughout the years.
May peace be granted to you as it has been to My loved one
My favorite part of my home is if you stand
at the bottom of my kitchen steps
looking towards the front door at around 8PM
when the traffic returns home from their workday
my disco ball chandelier confetti’s my foyer
with dance party festivities.
My favorite part of my home is
if you sit on my back deck under my ancient oak
while the chickens are bathing in the dirt or
scratching where my Hosta’s used to grow and bloom
you can hear St. Thomas on one side, 4th Reformed
greeting midday with their church bells
My favorite part of my home is
if it rains, any amount at all, the basement
because of the slope of our just under quarter acre,
floods rudely sopping the carpet
but not the floor unless it’s a ridiculous amount
which you’d know nothing about here.
A favorite part of my home is found,
almost as much and as frequently,
as the obligatory Kawphy
served in: brewed, pour-over, cappuccino, or Keurig,
because one type isn’t enough when you love it,
are the multitude of teas that can be brought to life
nearly as instantly as the hot pot can boil.
My favorite place in my home is my mailbox.
I feel like “Walking on Sunshine” knowing maybe…
That today might be the day that one of several
who write me frequently may have done so.
They never fail to lift my spirits, bring me joy,
remind me that I matter in the great white north,
in the deep rainy south, in the breezy southwest,
No matter what or where, I am uplifted in their love.
My second favorite part of my mailbox is the flag.
When I see it up, then down, knowing maybe…
they will also know they are loved by me unequivocally.
Another favorite part of my home is my studio
It is my place of solace and solitude
where I can stretch my head and heart
to write whimsical or paint darkness.
I can embrace the mood of muse intimately
without pride or caution as she warms me thickly.
But what I love more than any of those things,
what gives me purpose to breathe life into the walls,
to shovel out the walk for the fourth time today,
to sort the recycling and the trash every Wednesday night
are my family.
Punky the Chihuhua, Herbie the turtle,
Louise, Fifty, Julie, Roy, and Maude the chickens,
(Two of which are indoor and wear diapers)
Our pet Human, Will, that I found on a street corner,
guitar strapped to his back as he headed out to busk
one freezing sunny snowy Sunday morning a couple of years ago.
Back then, he asked for a warm place to sleep for the night,
he’s never left and I don’t want him to, neither does Ben.
Without Ben the Great or me, we aren’t the we,
that make our Home at Kawphy Hill
An Independent Nondiscriminatory Platform With No Religious, Political, Financial, or Social Affiliations - FOUNDED 2014
Life is a patchwork of moments — laughter, solitude, everyday joys, and quiet aches. Through scribbled stories, I explore travels both far and inward, from sunrise over unfamiliar streets to the comfort of home. This is life as I see it, captured in ink and memory. Stick around; let's wander together.
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