today,  the air is
all  october, a mix of
leaves  and nostalgia
that  betrays what's left 
of  the constructs we cling to
in  the aftermath 
of  the second week 
of  november. this day feels 
so  four weeks ago, 
like  former years when
trees  peaked as scheduled. this year,
they  reject their own
anatomy,  their
fated  decline, and instead
attempt  to remain
as  they were, remains
of  a summer that exists
only  in shadowed
memory.  in a
few  days, the green that persists
will  drop and die and
nothing  will stop that. 
november  will once again
be  november, the
way  it must, the way
we  all are.  this month feels so
forty  years ago, 
decades  fortified
against  a clock that cannot
be  unwound.  or a
timer.  such things wound
equally  well, depending
on  one's perspective.
one  morning this week, 
logical  fallacies on
tap,  a middle-aged
woman  tapped her desk,
fixed  me with a look and said, 
"be  careful."  the room 
became  the week, the
year,  the decades.  everyone 
felt  it. i hadn't
said  anything.  it
was  a warning shot and a 
moment  that defined
more  than that student
will  ever understand.  i
will  be careful – as 
careful  as deluge
that  follows the harshest drought, 
as  careful as time, 
careful  as hornets, 
careful  like vesuvius, 
like  cannonade, like
cacophony,  like 
clamor,  cracking, crush, and cause –
and  effect.  oh, yes,
effect.  i will be 
careful,  as careful as a
comet  and just as
easily  resigned. 
Great Lakes Greta
 

Nothing to say to this but YAAAAAAAS. Greta, ever grateful for you.
ReplyDeleteGreta for Poet Laureate.
ReplyDeleteI know I am one of MANY who treasure you, Greta....
ReplyDeleteYou are very sweet. You are all much too kind to me. I'm glad that CM tolerates my poetic rantings. Seriously.
DeleteThanks, Greta. I needed that. I love the movement from an almost nostalgic/elegiac mood at the beginning to fiestiness at the end. And all the alliteration at the end -- especially since it builds on sounds in the key word in the original admonition -- is just great.
ReplyDeleteWhat sweet things to say! I think the alliteration is a bit ham-fisted, but it felt SO good to write.
DeleteThis one's been bubbling since last week (obviously) and took longer to put together than most others. I don't spend a lot of time writing them (which also should be obvious), but I can't adequately explain the cathartic effect of ranting in this specific form. That anyone else values them at all is really surprising -- and something for which I'm very grateful.