Monday, April 30, 2012

Two Views

DUSK 

Flaming orange
sets dusk afire,
lush blues and greens conversing deeply
with red accents. 
Twilight's palette ignited,
colors swirl and dance
with restless intensity
like laughing children before bedtime,
leaping
into the eye
of the beholder.


DAYBREAK 

Flaming orange
sets daybreak afire,
lush blues and greens whispering softly
with red accents. 
Dawn's palette ignited,
colors swirl and dance
like sun-kissed children
eager to play,
leaping
into the eye
of the beholder.
                                

Wednesday, April 25, 2012

Walking with Kateri

My shoes, they crunch upon the gravel,
kicking up the dust,
sunlight spliced between the trees,
inviting wanderlust. 

Blue jay trills and woodpecker drills
in random soliloquy;
my failings and prayers cluster side by side --
restless soul needing wisdom to see.


 


I seek out Kateri, serene Mohawk friend,
perhaps standing beside a tree;
meek, unassuming, her Lily soul blooming,
she will fall in step with me. 

We walk, and we talk (but I hear only me),
the air growing fresh and pure;
I must improve much, but I feel her calm touch
upon me to reassure. 

As she departs, sweet hope springs alive
like a bursting, well-fanned flame;
and I know hope is due to this friend, mirror true

of His Love in her blessed name.  

(Written in honor of Blessed Kateri Tekakwitha, Lily of the Mohawks)

Letter to My Readers - April 24, 2012 (reprinted from above)

Tuesday, April 24th, 2012 

Hello, Readers,

Happy Spring -- and a gorgeous one it's turning out to be!

As I reflect upon my own poems and essays, I reflect also upon those of others.  On behalf of all of us whose blogs are not time-bound daily "updates" but rather discrete artistic endeavors of writing or other forms of art, I wish to highlight the point that our "archived" pieces, therefore, are just as timely today as they were on the day they were posted.  Because each piece is meant to stand alone (unless, of course, it's written in parts, or chapters), it doesn't "age" the way a time-bound blog update would age.  Poetry, essays, creative writing, and the visual arts don't age at all.  The word "archive," in this case, does not imply "out of date" or "now potentially irrelevant" as it might in a different type of blog.

So I ask you, please, to try and look into the archived months on this blog at some point in your browsing.  An author's earlier works can help flesh out one's interpretation of his later works.  

And, yes, following my own advice, I do always attempt to "look back" at my fellow writers' earlier, or earliest, pieces.  I have found this to be a rich source of understanding and ongoing significance.

Speaking of significance, for those of you who are Armenian and for all others who appreciate the momentum of history, I wish to commemorate this memorial day of earthshaking significance:  Armenian Genocide Memorial Day.

In his soul-rattling book, Black Dog of Fate, author Peter Balakian captures the horrific reality of the Armenian Genocide -- understood through the eyes of his beloved grandmother -- with a traumatically jarring poem toward the middle of the book.  The whole work really must be read.
     
In honor of this day, I enclose here a link to one of my favorite musical works (please click on title below):


May the blood, sacrifice, martyrdom, and tears of the Armenian people and their descendants bear renewed life and meaning for those in the homeland and in the diaspora.

God bless you all.

Sincerely,

~ Turquoise

Sunday, April 22, 2012

Finding My Place

Singing went unbelievably well today, due to the sweet and demure young woman who sang by my side.  She is a beautiful person by any standard, and in this she is exceptional:  She puts the music above herself.     

Her focus and peaceful demeanor -- not self-contained, but open, loving -- served to root my voice.  Upon this stable and mutually supportive foundation, a miracle happened.  Together, we bowed to the music and sang "as one."  She is a newer singer and has not yet harnessed her own power, but her voice resonates like a perfectly tuned bell.  One barely hears her; yet, every note sung by the rest of us is uplifted by the lovely ring of her sound.  I look around, each time, and see my wonder reflected in other pairs of eyes.  We've been graced with a gentle songbird.

Singing today with this sweet "little sister" half my age, I learned, way down deep in my diaphragm, what I'd been trying to learn for over a year now:  It is imperative that we singers sing simply, as ourselves and no one else.  Every person has a vocal instrument capable of further refinement and growth; and obedience to the most basic rules suffices to fill a song with beauty.  We need only plant the seeds we've been given; God gives the increase.

A split-second before we sang, I had a conversation with myself which went something like this:

"Whatever you do, you will not outshout this girl.  You will not belt, you will not strain.  You will not attempt to perform gymnastic vocal feats.  If you can't accomplish it with ease, you won't do it.  Reverence, reverence.  You will sing on the note required and no other shade of tone.  You will hold that note -- not with force, but with quiet steadiness.  You will "let" -- not "make" -- the tone come through and you will breathe it out in peace.  They don't need your white noise or whatever other fluff creeps in.  They need only the note.  The pure, clean note.  I don't care what else you don't do or can't do.  Just hold that note.  That's all I will permit from this moment on.  That's all I want.  Do you understand?"

I did.  I really did.  But this unassuming young woman, by the grace of God, became the spiritual instrument by which I was finally able to obey myself.

It was the quietest hymn I ever sang.  Ever.  But something lovely began to grow in that space where our two voices met, something higher than both of us -- what one might call "profound agreement."

In that focused atmosphere bathed in peace, I found my truer "range."  I'd been treated as a shoe-in soprano my whole life, but I no longer believe I'm quite that.  One might be tempted, then, to call me a "mezzo soprano" -- and yet, I'm wondering if I might even be a "contralto" (lower natural timbre).  My speaking voice (which is higher than "alto") is not definitive in this kind of assessment, nor is the ability to reach or even "ring" very high notes.  What counts here is the overall timbre and comfort range during singing where one's sound is fullest and clearest -- we start from there.  That's "home."

Such a relief it was (after 18 years of singing as a "shoe-in soprano") to begin to find my vocal "home!"  This young lady -- she is the soprano, proper.  During that quiet hymn, our roles shifted subtly beneath the surface -- and that was the source of the beauty.  Each of us slid into her own true "place," neither one of us straining at the bit.  It was not showy in the least.  It was, in fact, the most honest singing I've ever done in my life.  It was wonderful, even intoxicating, not to be the "raving soprano."  Humbling, fitting, right.

Wednesday, April 18, 2012

Hard to Tell

I remember when I could not speak
Walls in the mind and body weak
Dumb in words and ripe with rage
Bedraggled animal fresh out of the cage. 
They joked and they laughed
Backs and arms loose and free
Not bunched up in knots --
Could they see it in me? 
The fright that poured lymph into every gland
causing the senses to hone and expand 
Migraine fission in my head
day after day -- was I alive, or dead?

Tuesday, April 17, 2012

Athlete Speaks

Not a reader in sight
and honesty wins --
I'm missing my bicycles: 
two venerable Schwinns. 
On an eve like tonight
I'd have pedaled away,
April brushing my cheek
with air fragrant as May . . . 
and I'd stand up and pump,
thighs muscling down
with the force of a racer
gusting forward through town,
burning my bitter frustration away
with the ripping-fast speed
of a lightning ray.

Monday, April 16, 2012

Dirt Road in April

Dirt road in April,
warm, dusty trail,
you are what you are --
no pretense, no veil. 
Dirt road in April,
Spring's arbor anew
as the bare feet of children
play games upon you. 
Dirt road in April,
trusty old friend,
earthy brown carpet
welcoming those 'round the bend.



Wednesday, April 11, 2012

One

Addiction --
weeping wound
at the juncture of time and space
where "never"
collides with
"now." 
The angels
rush to gather 'round,
heads bowed,
bathing the wound
in their tears,
drenching the soul
with their prayers. 
And the world hurts
in unknowing sympathy,
because this
one
suffers so.

No Mathing Blather

Two plus two equals four . . . . .
If a liar affirms, am I sore?
At his assent, should I laugh -- forsaking all math?
Or has truth triumphed yet once more?

Release

Chasing a tornado, I've been --
breathless and frightened within
lest I do something wrong
to make that tornado grow strong --
as though I, against a tornado, could win.

Tuesday, April 10, 2012

Intersection

Synchronicity perplexing,
astounding me no end,
proximity and timing pure --
no circumstance need bend.

A Twist on Time

Truth
rent asunder
in memory's banks,
heads and tails
peeled off
then pasted back
on the
wrong coins,
visages surfacing
in slots unexpected: 
A penny for your quarter,
a nickel for your dime --
counting out of sequence,
meter out of rhyme. 

Glass Words

They cheapen hard-won words,
those who use them as a shield,
tinted glass to hold the world at bay
while they pretend to yield.

To Breathe

Decades of words
tied up in knots,

stashed out of sight,
untouched by light,
now spilling forth wildly
day and night --
great gulps of thought
inflating
collapsed lungs,
full sails billowing
in heart's wind . . .
and I cannot stop
inhaling
the sweetness
of lost words found,
exhaling poems
as I write
for my life.

Monday, April 9, 2012

Battle's End

Spiritual siege gasping its last,
I glimpse the distant light
while fever assails this
body of clay,
outrage assisting the purge
of illusion,
soul's blinding blight

acquired while attempting
to disarm the landmines
of a dissonant tongue.
While I sweated,
bowed low in the field,
sprays of gunfire
pockmarked the air,
scrambling my instincts,
piercing my ears,
twisting,
pulling,
gouging something away
until there was a hole,
a hole sprung wide in my soul.
A labor of love, yes,
but somewhere on that battlefield
between earth and sky
ran an invisible thread of steel
strung taut like a tripwire --
barbed, charged,
and waiting.

Still Standing

In the end,
the sincere will remain
tall and strong as girders,
each honest soul bearing up
another.
The insincere
will fall away --
flaccid,
unsupported,
buckling and
dissolving into
themselves.

Saturday, April 7, 2012

Cool Blue

The world is gone,
gone to its loves and its labors
under a placid blue sky,
and I wait . . .
wait for a stirring,
a new bud,
a warm breeze,
a sign of recognition . . .
for the sun is
chilly today.

Thursday, April 5, 2012

Song of the Soul

Something was lost in the cracks
(my trust in truth) --
and I must pull up the floorboards 
in search of it,
for the music calls . . . . .

Crushed underfoot,
I crawl,
hands patting the ground for rocks and
splinters --
but if knees will get me there,
I'll go,
for the music calls . . . . . 

Head throbbing,
heart sobbing,
I clutch pieces of reality shattered --
with these I will build,
for the music calls . . . . . 

Memory sleeping,
only fragments awake --
they keep watch through the dream-infested night,
awaiting first birdsong,
for the music calls . . . . .

Raw-kneed, I shiver,
my hands, how they quiver . . . . .  
But -- listen! 
The music calls.

Time Keeper

Time escaping, fleeing my grasp . . . . .
Music weaves loose ends together at last. 
Tones deep, melodic -- Love molded in sound,
Eternity's heartstrings touching ground.

Tuesday, April 3, 2012

In the Dark

Little boy played
in the gravelly park
long after sundown, 
entranced by the dark. 
Bully skulked by
and saw him there,
crept up behind him --
no time for a prayer. 
Poor boy went sprawling --
knee fractured by ground --
gravity's hostage
waiting to be found.

Monday, April 2, 2012

At the Bookstore

Book in hand
at the bookstore,
I was arrested
by a fierce scent passing
behind me,
blast of hardness
warning: 
"Aggression unto death." 

I turned. 
The face --
found. 
Across the invisible
diagonal line between us,
I noted: 
Chiseled,
expressionless,
hard as rocks. 
I switched
aisles. 
Still, I wonder.