Tuesday, May 26, 2009

Cherishing What Isn't


Ah, you three women whom I have loved in this
long life, along with the few others.
And the four I may have loved, or stopped short
of loving. I wander through these woods
making songs of you. Some of regret, some
of longing, and a terrible one of death.
I carry the privacy of your bodies
and hearts in me. The shameful ardor
and the shameless intimacy, the secret kinds
of happiness and the walled-up childhoods.
I carol loudly of you among trees emptied
of winter and rejoice quietly in summer.
A score of women if you count love both large
and small, real ones that were brief
and those that lasted. Gentle love and some
almost like an animal with its prey.
What is left is what's alive in me. The failing
of your beauty and its remaining.
You are like countries in which my love
took place. Like a bell in the trees
that makes your music in each wind that moves.
A music composed of what you have forgotten.
That will end with my ending.

Monday, May 18, 2009


Lake Michigan and the South Haven lighthouse.



This is the wooden playground I used to play on as a kid. This picture does not do justice for its size.

The graves of my grandfather, uncle and great-grandparents.
My mom.

The grave of my great-grandmother, whom I was named after.

Monday, May 11, 2009


These photos were all taken at Hancock Biological Station on Kentucky Lake, via Boy Scout Trail.