North star — a meditation

Don’t ask me
how I found out
that every dream
ever dreamt
becomes a star
in the night sky,
but I will tell you
a secret:

Look!

The North Star
was the first dream ever,
when god himself
saw you
in his sleep
then made
the entire universe
just for you.

Morning people — a meditation

Last night I dreamt
that every time
you ran a brush
through a child’s hair
it would play a musical note.
All the neighbors
would get up early,
open their windows,
and sip their coffee
to the symphony
of getting ready for school.
And everyone
was a morning person.

The swings — a meditation

Remember when
every day
was a new one,
the next moment
was just the rest
of right now,
and the passing
hours slipped
quietly into the past
when we weren’t looking?

Some days
we conquered swings
and slides,
other days we lost
to thunder,
and no one
was keeping score.

In days — a meditation

Come whisper
gibberish in my ear.
There’s nothing else
I would
rather
hear. Touch
my face
so my skin
can know
it has nowhere
else to go but you. Kiss
my mouth
till I can’t tell
who’s who.
Calm me down,
hold my hand
and walk me
out of here;
you know all the paths,
all the alleys, all the ways.
Help me.
I haven’t left
my mind in days.

Rain clouds — a meditation

I’m on a train
speeding through
the countryside
as a thunderstorm
rages outside
in the fields.
In the distance
rain clouds gather
like a group
of bullies
on the schoolyard.
The rain
taps the trees
in a game of tag.
I’m thinking
about God.

Origami — a meditation

The day you finally decided
to get rid of all the letters
from your past lovers,
you sat on the wooden floor
of your bedroom
outnumbered
by your scattered memories.
You folded each sheet
into an origami swan
and hung them all
from the windowsill.
By sunset,
your window looked
like a shimmering lake
where a flock of birds
has landed to rest
for the night.

Broken city — a meditation

Last night I dreamt
that you and I stood
over broken glass
looking out
at our ravished city.
And when
it started to rain
you held your umbrella
over our heads
as the raindrops
tapped on the fabric
a secret code.
“Can you hear that?”
you asked me.
“The rain is saying
It’s not over yet.”