Coyote Paths

Forgive my slight
implicit bias
for Southern California—
the ones I love
live there
where freeways
span the canyons.

Woodsmoke and wet eucalyptus
in winter months,
Mama Marta
and her eight grown sons
feed us on Spanish
in the afternoons—
La Sirena, El Bandolon.

Tired awake
with where I am,
across the river by night
and through the scrub—
paths we scratched as … Continue Reading ››

Don’t Cut the Fat

We’ll lick the cream.
The beater’s engine’s warm.

I need
that picnic knife.
It holds an edge.
Its cracked handle
fits my grip.

Kitchen floor
a chess board upset,
I upend full grocery sacks
on accident.

Heaps more dishes
in a day
than table space—
make room, my heart
falters often
at the brim.

Little Given

O Land, long-neglected,
accept this my conscious
attention. Tender grasses
push up endless
but I know you’re meant
for more than these last remnants
of the life you led.
Hours yet of tilling
in my limbs
but I can turn air
and light and rain
into soil, I can feel
we may again begin.