bzzzzz ~ Trifextra: Week 30

Buzzing through dreams,
she mosquitoes in circles
around clouds of unsuspecting dreamers
snug in fluffy beds.

She whispers chants into their heads,
and stings them with ideas
that she wants them to spread.

Brenda Warren 2012

A shout out to Trifecta, for this prompt:
This weekend we want you to write a 33-word response using the name of an animal as a verb. Some examples are: to dog, to snake, to bear, to duck. . .you get the idea. Write about anything you want and use whichever verb tense you need, but give us an animal as a verb in there somewhere. Let’s see if we can discover new things by looking from a different perspective.

Feeding the Monkey

Anxiety plays prelude to her fix.
Its insidious tickling
opens vivid yearning
tip – tip – tipping her
toward Needle’s veining ways.

A nick of tinted light
illuminates her arm’s crook
as a tinny cannula splits
her skin and drifts
gentle waves through her wayward limbs,
eradicating anxiety with escape’s sweet bliss.

Brenda Warren 2012

The word “fix” drove this piece. I decided to explore it as an addict’s fixation, but did not intend the piece to end in “bliss.” A “tinny cannula” is meant to describe a needle. A cannula is a flexible tube designed to dump drugs into a person, or lab animal. I did not mean for the addict’s journey to sound so nice, but I imagine the addict feels this way.

The title is a reference to “the monkey on your back.” It is an idiomatic expression for the urge that addicts feel.

For more pieces using the words that wind their way through this piece, visit The Sunday Whirl.

A Digital Immigrant’s Tale

Digital immigrant sitting
with iPhone 4s in her hand,
seriously thinks of quitting,
as if Siri can understand.
It misinterprets each command.
Its voice leaves her fit to be tied.
The clerk its praises should remand,
he opened his mouth and he lied.

Brenda Warren 2012

Shout out to Gemma who provided the prompt at Dverse Poets Pub. Here are the parameters for a Huitain:

It is a poem in a single Ballade stanza.
The verse form was most popular in the 16th century and was often used for epigrams in the 18th century. One source suggests the Huitain may have begun in Spain.
The basic layout is:
Line length: 8 (French) or 10 (English) syllables
Rhyme scheme: ababbcbc
Number of lines:8

Home is

Home is a house, is a meal, is a stone
is a cat, is a man, is a fossilized bone.
Home is a lamp, or the look in an eye.
Home is hope and the freedom to cry.

Home is a mother, a poet, a friend.
Home is the banks of a river’s bend.
Home is in books that whisper at night,
in poems and stories, in words that take flight.

Brenda Warren 2012

This piece is for a Trifecta challenge. The challenge was to write between 33 – 333 words using the third definition of the word home.
HOME (noun)
1 a : one’s place of residence : domicileb : house
2 a : the social unit formed by a family living together
3 a : a familiar or usual setting : congenial environment; also :the focus of one’s domestic attention b : HABITAT

unreachable

Time ricochets by
then teases memory
like lace in the cleavage
of curvaceous desire.
Dazzling lifetimes dwindle
into invisible moments,
lines on maps,
warped and inaccessible.
A plunge of memories
spins a narrow passageway.
Dark and enticing
it pulsates with yesterday’s
untouchable tales
shrouded by the mystery of lace
deep within an alcove of unreachable desire.

Brenda Warren 2012

Visit The Sunday Whirl.

Lake Vermilion Vacation

for Len

Missing link
No honeymoon
No one-on-one
Sans kid, sans time

Marrow to marrow
Bow to stern
Under stars, under moon

You navigate me
I navigate you
Loons pitch calls across the bay
Ululating in the wake of our sway

Sink me tender
Make me swoon
Administer triage
Swathe life’s wounds

Missing link connected
We climb on deck
Railed toward home
Anchored in each other’s port

Brenda Warren 2012

Visit The Sunday Whirl.

Visiting Heaven

When I arrive in Virginia, I sing
to the graves of my ancestors
resting in the grasses of Northside Park.
Over hedges, children race in gunnysacks
and sail in swings. The monkeys are gone,
but their castle remains. Its stone moat
protects us from the poo monkey ghosts fling,
screeching their protests sideways through time.

Later, when I stand on 8th Avenue
facing Grandma’s house,
my spirit jumps from my flesh
and spreads itself into the creaks and corners
of that old house whose arms
embrace the early days of me.
Steam pours heat into Virginia’s houses,
filling up wood pores in floors and walls
with its deep wet scent, wafting wisps of
ancient we.

Spirit filled with steam,
I turn toward Wake ‘em Up Bay.

Forsaken through years of dis-connect,
my aging body weeps as it enters the flow
of Lake Vermilion, rejoicing its reunion
with the waters of its womb. A desire to
float into eternity toys with my senses.

I picture heaven as a sauna in the sky
on the shores of an ethereal Vermilion
shimmering early days of me.

In heaven, Grandpa tosses cups
of the lake, dipped from a barrel,
and we watch water
dance its sizzle
on the pearly stove’s rocks.

Everybody’s here.

Len laughs and his eyes mimic the glimmer
in Grandpa’s eyes, two peas in a pod,
hyucking it up in the sauna.

Dave Arnott asks if we’re sure it isn’t hell;
it’s so damn hot in here.

Grandpa chuckles and throws
more water on the rocks.

The waters of Vermillion lap my back
and pull me back to the present moment,
rocking on the surface of my youth,
imagining heaven as a sauna
where everyone I love
jokes while Grandpa throws water on the rocks.

It holds my childhood’s blood,
this water,
this receptacle of story and time.

I pull myself out onto the ladder of the boat
and up into the rest of my life.

Vermilion drips down my skin ‘til it dries.

 

Brenda Warren 2012

~~~~~~~~~~~
Process Notes:
I wrote this piece for a Trifecta challenge. We were prompted to write 333-3333 words on any theme, in any style. Not counting its title, this piece is precisely 333 words long.

A week from today, I will be on a houseboat on Lake Vermilion with my husband, Len. We will have the boat for four nights. It’s been over 30 years since I’ve been swimming in Lake Vermilion. We’ll visit Virginia before we head to the lake. I have not been there for 17 years. This poem is my imagining of my upcoming trip with my husband. Lucky we!

We are going to a folk music festival close to the Mississippi River following our week on the water. Life is good. Yup.

Notes on heaven: David Arnott is a good friend who has passed already. Len is still living, but I can’t imagine that it would really be heaven if he were not there with me.

one giant leap

When Joyce told us that burning her bra on the steps of the capitol was the proudest moment of her life, I thought it had something to do with Aunt Barb’s breast implants.

Brenda Warren 2012

Here’s the prompt from Trifecta:  
Forty-three years ago today, Neil Armstrong became the first person to ever walk on the moon. In celebration of Moon Day we want you to write 33 words about someone who took a giant leap. It can mean whatever you’d like, just make sure you write exactly 33 words.

after the fallout


Crows choreograph infinity
against a cinder sky
until black feathers unfurl
beneath their screeches
and float to the pale open
hands of a girl-child who
inserts them into her snaky
red dreadlocks
whirling a dervish
to flash the crows’ audacity
back at them,
to make them take notice
of her power.

Brenda Warren 2012

Visit The Mag. My immediate thought when I saw the picture was fighting crows.  Then I read Infinity, the piece that Tess wrote this week.  The idea of infinity in the picture added inspiraton.

Life is Good

Clouds powder the mountains with mist
until the sun’s slow erotic warming
dries the sky, dissipating droplets
into the blue.

Our gaze strays over gold grasses
that rustle like silk covering earth’s sweet curves.

We sigh in morning’s lazy swing
while the melancholy river
whispers its currents through pale logs
where turtles bask off evening’s cool flow
beneath the sun’s ardent spray.

A rosy finch flings her voice scattering it
through the branches of a proud ponderosa,

and we look up at the sky
rimmed by mountains
convinced that life is good.

Brenda Warren 2012

Visit The Sunday Whirl.