Gone Missing
Who are we without the birds & bees,
the turtles & trees?
The world unravels a little more
each time a species goes extinct.
Yet, without warning, God’s gone missing.
Could it be: seeking
answers for the endangered species?
Could it be: manning a backup plan for the
race,
shepherding for iCloud space?
It’s that time of year when
amber light spills
onto the green growing
world.
This is how it is:
wherever I go, there I am.
I name God in the magnolia, maple & willow,
some days in the raven, robin, wren.
I’ve spent a lifetime shouldering the nameless.
I’ve spent a lifetime floating aimless,
hung-tight in a helium balloon.
I cry myself a river, surrender
to the business of what’s missing.
Missing is kindness. It’s what’s missing
in the beating heart of this world.
Persephone
The sun is a jester in
an overcast sky.
It glints on the weight
of day.
I listen for the sound of dark
in the umbra of earth, search the
shadows of gaunt sunken trees.
Who says shadows are a danger in dark?
If you prefer green things blooming
dancing nymphs in meadows,
seek the church light of youth.
Give me lichen, liverwort,
moss and hornwort—
stunted & pond growing,
slow growing in shade.
Born again, you taught me
to sharpen my eye,
an owl at night, an octopod
at sea, a cave climbing loach.
I refuse to water
the plants, draw the curtains,
turn on the lights. I’m
meant
to live in inky fog.
Come find me in a larch
of burdened needles—
once gold, now parched,
near the Narcissus patch
whispering your name.
I’ll pluck you a
pomegranate seed
from the mercy of my
mouth
from my rib of my burning
bones.
Invocation
When all is said &
done
when too much is
too much,
& enough’s enough let me
remember
how prayer softens the bladed
tongue.
Let me remember how to—
forgive forget forgo.
In the midst of purple milkweed,
queen of the prairie
bird of paradise let
me
remember the sound
of a crow’s caw a
raven’s squawk
in morning’s amber glow.
So little time. So much to do.
Only yesterday
hasty words
slid from my tongue a
trigger
sounding an alarm I did not
remember
to breathe.
Let the wrecked
red wagon point
north.
Truth be told, let me travel
light under shadows
under the spell
of a moonlit sonata.
When I can’t remember
what I’m doing here
or how to release
the wind-caught sparrow
let me remember to
ponder Rumi—
there are hundreds of ways
to kneel & kiss the ground.
Louisa Muniz lives in
Sayreville, N.J. She holds a Master’s in Curriculum and Instruction from Kean
University. Her work has appeared in Tinderbox Journal, Palette Poetry,
Menacing Hedge, Poetry Quarterly, PANK Magazine, Jabberwock Review and
elsewhere. She won the Sheila-Na-Gig 2019 Spring Contest for her poem Stone
Turned Sand. Her work has been nominated for Best of the Net and a Pushcart
Prize. Her debut chapbook, After Heavy Rains by Finishing Line
Press was released in December, 2020.
Yes,so many ways. Thank you Louisa! Your thoughts on life, living, those yet to come, stir deep places within. Yes, thank you my friend and congratulations! 💙 Joycelyn
ReplyDeleteMy beautiful talented friend of 50 plus years as she blossoms into celebrity status-so proud of you
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