Wednesday, February 16, 2011

BIRD BOP




















Finch upside down on a thistle sock

A whistle stop

For bird a flutter, bird a twitter

Hoppy, pecky

Bird-zipping, low flying

Tiny beak, tail-flick:

Birds, snow, seed, feed.

Puffed out peck’ums.


Touche-touche

Dart/swoop/flutter

Fat Jack on a couple o’ tacks

Hop-sticks,

Keep a movin’

Down/up, birds up down

Peck’um.












copyright cathylarsonsky 02/2011

Saturday, January 1, 2011

THE DOLL CHAIR

People seldom sat in her,

The Doll Chair

She lived by the hearth,

Facing outward,

She partnered the television

Two sibling watchers,

One on squat claw feet,

The other a grey orb

Observing the Living Room

At my grandparents’ house,

With its worn Regency grandeur

Its well-trod carpets

And fragrances delicious and kind,

Waved inside by the swinging kitchen door.


On Christmas morning

The doll I wanted,

Had longed for

All those other seasons

Appeared in the Doll Chair,

Its small arms extended,

Next to my sister’s choice,

And our two Christmas stockings

Bulging with treats.


That was the miracle of having.


But before came the miracle of waiting.


Christmas eve,

On the foldout in Pop Pop’s study

Sister and I lay bug-eyed

While headlights from our cars

And the neighbors’ cars

Lit the darkness behind white nylon curtains

Made dancing panels on the high ceiling

And whispers came and went

Muted fluttering from the other

Regions of the limitless house.

In the mysterious night


I lie sleepless, alive to every sound.

My sister’s quiet breath beside me

I can’t wait but I do

Knowing that my wish is going to come true

That magic is about to happen

I am present to the velvet darkness

In an ever-new, ever changing way.


And it seems to me now

That my child mind believed less in Santa

Than in my ability to make appear,

By my dreaming and my desiring,

The most cherished of earthly things.

The Doll Chair a portal

For the bright, the new, the shining.


She is mother love

She is the full-petaled rose of possibility

Of gifting, of renewal.

On a New Year’s morning she reminds me of what is gone

And the possibility of what yet might be

Unseen now

But roiling in my heart to appear

Tiny flashes of clarity in the sleepless night

Reassurance of what may come

What may yet come.


copyright cathylarsonsky jan 2011

Sunday, October 31, 2010

FALLing

On the ancient Celtic calendar, tonight is Samhain, when the living and dead join hands and tango. It is the eve of a New Year; the tropical summer with its searing heat is behind us and the introspective, crystalline winter is ahead. It seems I have come round again on the calendar, to a place just above that spiraling DNA of inner growth where I can look down from my perch and see clear through to one year ago, when jubilation over a completed CD veered, all at once, into the territory of grief and loss. No matter how it strikes, I can never dodge the process of grief. It is a flood. It must have its way.

How many times I’ve wandered the path in the woods behind our house this past year. Once it was a retreat, a white land offering pristine beauty. Then it became green and flowered, enchanted and fragrant. Summer brought a surprise: the arrival of a little pup in our lives, a creature to shake me up, drive me crazy – to come along the path with me.


The woodland way is now broad and well-used, with choice canine toileting spots on either side. It’s a friendly place I travel three or four times daily, with Sookie coming up behind, her ears flying, the picture of joy and abandon. When I sit by the spring, my arms and lap are full of wriggling and warm new life. The leaves are gold fairy coins against a blue sky.



So, let them Fall
Like water over the precipice
The old dreams
The ghosts and demons
The scaries and the faeries
Let them Fall --
The leaves, the leftovers
The undigested, the ruined
The perfect, the imperfect
The tears, the joy
The anger, the helplessness.
All of it, all of it.
To happen again and again.

Friday, August 27, 2010

Dog Days of Summer


The stork brought a little present;

Dropped it in our yard the night of July 25 --

A squirmy, lost

Flea-infested pup.

Now, a lunar cycle later

She lives here.


Over the past 30 days

I’ve decided to surrender her to the Rescue

Four separate times.

But then couldn’t go through with it,

Cried all night -- not the dog -- me.


I can’t go many places any more

Not for more than an hour or so.

I am on carpet patrol,

House training alert

Sometimes, often, at my wit’s end.


Why why why?

Why go through all this?

My heart has been stolen

By Sookie Moon.

Alias “Puppa.”


I wonder,

On the good days,

If I'm the one

Who's Rescued.




Saturday, May 29, 2010

May greetings


FAERY SONG

Come with me

Put down your spade

Stop the dizzy spinning between your ears


There will be music

You will hear

And wonders


You will see

It is so easy,

Just come with me.



If the marvels fall quietly upon your senses

Open your senses

This is done

By letting go


If you do not see the beauty

It is still here


Still, here




Water over stones

And secret lights in the dew


Many who crawl

Swim, slither, or fly

Know the way

Why not you,

Walker?


Why not you?



(copyright Cathy Larson Sky 5/29/2010)










Tuesday, April 20, 2010

Road Trip Wagon Train

Pat and I recently drove to Sarasota, FL for a concert, stopping on the way at Roswell, GA for an Irish session, and at St. Simon Island to visit a friend. In Sarasota we both came down with a cold/flu and headed prematurely for home, where we spent the next two weeks as runny-nosed, coughing couch potatoes. During this time we rented Ken Burns’ documentary The West on Netflix, fifteen hours of the grim history of the wresting of our country from Native Americans. I heard again the doctrine of Manifest Destiny that justified the whole mess; hadn’t thought of it since sixth grade history class. At that time, as a kid raised on TV cowboys (good) and Indians (bad, except for Tonto), I just assumed that all had been for the best, and now I was living in hunky dory Eisenhower land, thanks to the valiance of my forebears.

Now my road trip memories are etched in some kind of tableau right next to the images of wagon trains snaking across the land; travel-lusting Americans, side by side, from places all over the country, sharing a common dream of the future. Are we any different, we selfish, restless people, today? We are a strange tribe, driven by collective ambitions while demanding our right to act as individuals.

I felt the obnoxiousness of our American tribe on I 95 as I encountered folks at rest stops, in hotel hallways, waiting in line for coffee and fries at McDonald’s, or zipping by me on the road in sturdy cars with bikes strapped to the roof (it was the beginning of Easter vacation.) Aspects of communal facilities troubled me, like for instance the women who leave toilets damp (which one sometimes only discovers after sitting down.) Or the fact that some magnetic force attracts me to the only stall in a row with the latch broken (again, only discovered once I sit down, having arrived at the 11th hour of my need) so I have to keep the door closed with one foot, while some fussy and vocal toddler impatiently rocks against it. Where is the child’s mother? She is talking on her cell phone while washing her hands at the other end of the room. Was this the etiquette observed at freshly dug latrines on the trail? I wonder, and some not-so-nice images appear.

Feverish and swollen faced, Pat and I faced traffic jam after jam as we inched along I 95. Troubling things happen among the tribe during these events. One or two or three renegades decide that the waiting does not apply to them, and run past the line of cars on the left hand margin, with an attitude like, “watch me, suckers.” Then, when the driver discovers that he really does have to merge, he depends on the kindness of his fellows to let him again into the ranks. I really wonder about this psycho-social behavior. Is this the same me-ism that caused settlers to ride roughshod over others to stake their claim on homestead acreage, on gold mining sites? Competition is the backbone of our tribe. Sometimes it feels like it is actually a pastime in itself, even when the prize is ambiguous, or meaningless.

Worst of all were the trucks. I guess truck drivers are a sort of sub-group of our tribe, with different rules. Like, you get to bully anyone smaller than you if they are slowing you down in any way. You get to drive faster than anybody else. Why is this? Because you are busy delivering the Stuff. These are the kings of consumerism, the lords of the highway. Not only do they blast you with their horn to get out of the way, they continue with the blast while and after passing – a steady stream to match the F and GD and SOBs the driver is probably muttering under his breath. I understand that these guys drink like Red Bull to keep them alert. How weird is that, Red Bull? The Lakota must be laughing up their sleeves at that choice of name.

So now I sit quietly in my mountain home, in a territory once peopled by the Cherokee but now claimed by white Christians who worship a prophet born two thousand years ago in the Middle East, who was dark skinned and wore sandals. I don’t understand this mongrel tribe to whom I belong. Or maybe I do, but don’t want to admit it. I walk in the woods and by the streams and wonder whether the spirits there can ever welcome me; I know myself as a member of the fair skinned people who bribe and promise and lie, who come on with the tractors and the asphalt, claiming a better life for all. The past is still alive.

Tuesday, March 2, 2010

White on White


The White is not a kind, benevolent teacher. It is a trickster, a shape-changer -- beautiful, but terrible. Many people believe these mountains are home to fairies and ghosts. This photo of a twisted bittersweet vine looks to me like a long creature with legs ending in giant bird- claws, ready to fling back its hoary head in laughter once no one is watching.

Last time I went into the White, about ten days and a four-day thaw ago, I climbed a steep rise to sit on a fallen tree trunk and observe the Blue Ridge, visible through the standing line of bare trees. Another animal had been where I walked in the snow. The prints were about the size and shape of a dog’s. Just as I crested the hill, the tracks led up to and through the V shaped opening of a split sapling. An instant picture of my pet tiger cat and her love of flirting through small spaces appeared in my mind, and I felt certain that the tracks had to be those of a large cat. Wildcats have been spotted on our land and in the adjoining Pisgah National Forest.

I was too far from the house to be heard by my husband if I hollered for help. The steady drumming of my heart as I climbed higher turned into the need to open my mouth and pant.

Breath and breath and breath.

Afraid. Afraid, but not turning back, my legs stubborn and willful, I kept on till I passed through the narrow opening we call intention, choice, or risk. Any of those words that mean doing something you’re scared to do. What was the alternative? Slinking back to the house, knowing that I’d abandoned a goal (albeit a tiny goal) out of fear, or laughing about it over the phone with a girlfriend, sipping a cup of cocoa, covering my failure with wit, making it a funny story? Lame.

Stray Plenifora branches, with wicked red thorns, insinuated themselves under my coat and sweater, scratched my belly. They dove into the top of my rubber boots, caused bright welts on my right leg, wounds I only discovered later, in the bath that night. I wondered if the marks were some kind of rash, until I recalled the woods and recognized the shorthand of the wild upon my flesh: the consequence of my intrusion, the sharp price of admission to the White.