MERRY BLUE
CHRISTMAS
To the
sugar plummed,
Santa
Claused and jingled,
belled
Christmas dropouts,
the ones
who’ve had enough
of happy
family images;
tables
laden with fine food,
piles of
asked-for gifts under
a formally
dressed tree.
You may be
the one who lost
your job the
day before Christmas,
or had to
flee your home
when the
bombs started exploding
in your
neighbourhood.
I know some
of you
just
received a diagnosis
from your
doctor, with the word
‘terminal’
attached to it,
you who
feel left out
of the
brightly lit party,
come back
to the real story
of this
festive holiday:
to the
no-room-at-the-inn,
the
slaughter of other male babies
born in the
area at that time,
to the
travel, the homelessness,
the
scarcity, rejection and violence,
the fleeing
and protecting new life.
Merry Blue
Christmas to you
who thought
you were
in a different
story
You’re not.
Pain finds
a place everywhere,
love
foreshadows loss,
peace
invites war.
the unpredictable likes
to surprise
the planned.
Since we
can’t stop
circling
the sun,
share food
and music,
sing and
dance,
drink a
toast to the Star
sending
light to our path
through the dark.
It never snows here at Christmas
well, almost never
but this December it dropped in early
and made itself at home.
Christmas lights made it a party.
I caught the rush from crowds, late nights –
my body recruited a virus.
The virus ordered rest.
I was rushing through my rest
when a neighbour came over
introduced Roxie and left town.
I gazed at the Rottweiler/
German Shepherd:
a rolling boulder
with a no-nonsense face.
She appraised me calmly.
On our walks, she tugged at the leash
until I released the handle to her –
I held on to the folded end.
She took her herding job seriously,
glancing back to check on me,
growling at unknown men
passing too close to us.
She took her time to read the trees.
On their late night strolls
Roxie and my neighbour
sometimes escorted nurses
at the end of their shifts
to their cars parked in shadows
to ward off predators hanging
around hospitals late at night.
A war dog crossed with a herding one.
You don't want to mess with her
but she will give her life
to protect you.
Each day the world turned whiter.
Thick flakes waltzed through the air.
Sky and streets disappeared,
only suggestions of houses and trees.
Surrounding areas lost power.
Darkness and cold entered homes.
I was aware we could lose
our warmth any moment.
In my home, Roxie
would turn mellow:
“You want me to move there?
No problem.
Shall I follow you around?
Or do you prefer I stay in one place?
Whatever.”
When I filled her bowl
with her special treat - chicken soup
she licked the bowl till it shone
turned it over, licked again
licked the floor underneath
then took the bowl to her place
and lay down cradling it.
I slowed my pace to Roxie's.
I didn't notice when the virus left.
I reclined on the sofa,
Roxie stretched out
on the floor alongside.
She watched me with sleepy eyes.
You could almost hear us purring.
I divided my attention between her
and a black and white movie.
Two dancers on the screen
swirled in unison like a snowflake
across an evening sky.
“Whatever,” I said
to no one in particular.
“All is good... “
Mind that troubles words
rivers can overflow
the heart is always thirsty
feet searching for a rhythm
lost in the crowd
city streets are endless
words can rise above the noise
winged desires seek the sky
the moon comes down
into the calm bay
opening a path for my spirit
out of a traffic-jammed life
the rhythm of time
red-circulation of life
eyes reflecting light
I follow the mystery
THE WEEK BEFORE CHRISTMAS
(Why I didn’t shop this holiday)
‘Twas
the week before Christmas
when all through my life
not one happy person was stirring
not even an amusing louse
no, not in my house.
The phone it kept ringing,
visitors had the door swinging
and voices rose in despair.
A friend insisted I hear
her complaints about girth
-- her
husband’s, not hers;
a mental health expert protested
losing the job she detested;
a writer I know revealed
her agent had turned into a rat
and she’s ready to act the cat;
a teacher shed bitter tears
after her new partner took on airs
and departed with the old money
left to the teacher by a senior honey.
It was welcome all
to the on-going party
at my home of mourning.
Throngs of complaints
met no unfriendly constraints
where Christmas carols jingled
and festive lights blinkled.
Then came a long-time friend
who believes in a revolutionary end
-- he went through his list
of everything wrong
but didn’t finish his accusing song
-- he plans to come back.
Away from the house I drove
into the Christmas rain
but a BMW crashed
into the back of my Impala.
The driver shouted at my gall(a)
for blocking his attempt
to run the red light.
Yes, my next-door neighbour
is to die for
-- but a dog lives there,
he thinks his job is to make
everyone happy.
Somewhere in the world
I know exist happy people
in spite of everything. Yes,
there’s Joy, the happy psychologist
and the Joy who authors romances
with happy-endings and dances,
but -- I don’t know them.
There’s a Joy Church
for people who’ve lost their way..
There may be something
there for me. No harm
in checking it out.
On the other hand, I could just
paint the complaints bright colours
and stick them on the Christmas tree.
Merry, merry,
and wishes, wishes, everyone!
Lve your work Lilija. Thanks Lothlorien Poetry for brining it to us.
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