The Sink

Sink

The kitchen counter I selected was
of Corian, with integrated sink.
I chose it over stone or tile, cause
I liked the jointless look. It made me think
it wouldn’t grow a gap or spring a leak.
Its seamless surface had a clean appeal.
I wanted white. The space is tight. I seek
a softer attitude than stainless steel.

Installers came, and after they were done,
presented me the piece they’d cut away
to add the sink, and said most everyone
will use it as a cutting board. Today
I rinsing dropped it. Now I’m here to tell
I couldn’t lift it out: it fit too well!

Posted in Home, Poetry | Tagged | Leave a comment

Villefranche Sur Mer

Villefranche

Before me spreads the topic coast of France:
a stop unplanned, selected as the wind
entangled Monaco. The tour’s mischance
betakes us here, a panorama spinned
because the anchors let us turn a bit,
the view resorts on shore and stepping cliffs,
the overcast now threatening to spit,
the bay unoccupied except by skiffs
that morning toted passengers to shore
and afternoon has settled for a rest.
Behind the hills lurk mountains, cities, more,
while I on chaise am feeling doubly blest:
beloved buddy absent for a time,
and me relaxed to play with metered rhyme.

Posted in Personality, Poetry, Writing | Tagged , | Leave a comment

Primacy

Question%20mark%20button[1]

So you feel bullied when I say a word,
and I feel bullied when you shop with me.
Except our definition is absurd
if we mean mean coercive tyranny.

Instead let’s recognize your feelings hurt
by “petulant,” “draconian,” and “cold.”
But that’s when you should look at you, alert
to learn what mastery may be controlled.

And I should see it’s only pressure laid
on me, to buy or else explain why not.
I’ll find a way aside or I’ll put paid
to what I want to purchase. We forgot
to think what “bully” means – too quick to be
a victim, we gave ego primacy.

Posted in Philosophy, Poetry | Tagged | Leave a comment

Dishwasher

Dishwasher

I have to test the dishwasher – so much
has been delivered damaged or installed
with leak, without a level, or with such
a gap I can’t ignore. I’m not appalled,
upset; it’s not a shock or a surprise
that builders are too busy or unsure.
But noticing what bothers ears and eyes,
and making fine adjustments, is a pure
objective satisfaction, like a tune
composed of perfect pitch and melody.

I’m sorry you’re distracted. I assume
you’re just too occupied with stress to be
appreciating fit with sense and brain.
I’ll heed machine routine and check the drain.

Posted in Home, Poetry | Tagged | Leave a comment

The Cruise

Cruise

I’m thinking how to summarize this trip:
if I were more adventurous, I guess
I wouldn’t miss a day to leave the ship,
but disembarking ratchets up my stress.
I love to nest no matter where’s my bed –
what’s more, my cabinmate depends on me
to read the map, observe what lies ahead,
and even understand the currency.

I’m not complaining. Here the views are fine,
the room is adequate, the service great,
excursions mostly good, abundant wine,
and tasty food for which we never wait.
But scatterbrained behavior jars a nerve
(I have to beg these stanzas, to observe).

Posted in Personality, Poetry, Writing | Tagged , | Leave a comment

Vanity

vanity

My vanity is asymmetrical.
No matter where I look there’s something wrong:
geometry, the knobs I have to pull,
the faucet taps, and how it takes too long
to feel its water warm into my palm.
Its crooked bottom edge disturbs my view.
One door is out of plumb. I’m staying calm,
but I may trade it in for something new.

Or maybe I’ll keep eccentricity.
This much irregularity can please.
It’s so unvain and yet called vanity!
The flaws at first disliked begin to ease
the months of chronic twinges in my neck.
I may decide I want to keep this wreck.

Posted in Home, Poetry | Tagged | Leave a comment

Not Such A Good Day

220px-Cerebral_lobes[1]

The toddler and his parents moved last week.
I skirted stacks of boxes, searched for books
and toys and coffee gear, in hide-and-seek
I didn’t need. I wasn’t charmed by looks
or feelings. Next I was by news dismayed —
my kitchen cabinets produced my frown.
We don’t know where they are, so work’s delayed,
and soon I learned my garden tree was down.

I think I started laughing then; too much
was going cattywampus, backwards, weird.
It triggered my resilience and a touch
of gratitude it wasn’t worse. I veered
away from fret and even kept my calm
when fielding a distress call from my mom.

Posted in Family, Philosophy, Poetry | Tagged | Leave a comment

TYVM

 

Cottage May 27 2019

I visited my cottage yesterday.
I saw the shape of bathroom, kitchen, shed,
selected tones of grout, forgot to stay
to dump the mail, and caught a lift instead
to this my temporary lodging place,
supplied without a deadline by a friend
I’m getting used to living with. Home base
is shifted south for now, and I contend
with ventilation sounds instead of rain,
with window glass that only faces west,
a year-old cat we cannot seem to train,
a fold-out bed that serves as sofa best.
But honestly, the change that strikes me most
is how I treasure hours with my host.

Posted in Home, Poetry | Tagged | Leave a comment

Skin

Skin

The more I read, the more I learn the lies
my cohort fed on, childhood to youth,
and through advancing age. It’s with surprise
I start to love nutrition’s fatty truth
and gape at facts about our insulin
long-known and hard-suppressed by published folk.
Established science falters, wearing thin,
while party lines appear as myth or joke.

The tenets fall like bowling pins when struck
by rolling evidence and weighty fact.
I sputter and I mutter what the fuck,
reviewing lab reports for their exact
results — unbiased science — and begin
applying fatty acids to my skin.

Posted in Aging, Health, Poetry | Tagged , , | Leave a comment

Calluses

Berk2010

I’m six weeks homeless though I have a bed.
A dear companion chose to shelter me
throughout my big remodel. So instead
of customed comforts, naked privacy,
and writing space, I watch her TV shows
and talk at times I used to savor mute.
I juggle keys and where my walking goes,
confuse some dates and change what I compute.

Like growing calluses for some new skill,
I’ve hurt my neck attending to her chat,
too often turned one way. I’d better fill
a different chair. My gratitude’s intact,
but shopping bags today had too much heft,
and now I wince whenever I turn left.

Posted in Aging, Home, Poetry | Tagged | Leave a comment