Finding the Woodsman

At the end of the road, a doe
dead under a sign: Dead End.

After all these years,
I'm still turning
every stone, looking
under every hoof.

To find a stream.
A rifle cartridge.
An ankle
poking through the dirt like a tulip.

“Who Remembers the Armenians?”

I remember them
and I ride the nightmare bus with them
each night
and my coffee, this morning
I'm drinking it with them

You, murderer—
Who remembers you?

Bulrush

Every damned day I think of my child,
little floating, accidental, couple

cells, couple pretty pretty curls, I put her in
the many-babies river, I kissed her

off, good go, good go go away
from me and not be mine my

little reaching
little fingery

thing.

“And life is more changeable than I thought. I mean life can be miserable for a long time and then later happy. It's not just one thing or another—it doesn't get fixed into a groove called ‘personality' and then run along that way until the end. But I really used to believe it did.”

“O whatever God or whatever ancestor that wins the next life
i pray let me be an artifact of use. let all my poems be
bowls or thrones or hairpieces or marriages.
let everything i make, if it should survive, tell the next world
mine were a people of faculty and faith.”

“Sometimes I think language should cover its own eyes when it speaks.”

“...a heart surgeon told me once,
no need to worry: once the cutting starts, ‘a wound
shines by its own light.'“

“And I thought, Fuck! Those humans!Always finding a way to break each other's hearts!

“Mothering, for me, means willpower, fortitude, grit. It is the transcendent power to multiply oneself, succeeded by the supreme humility to serve the second self.”

“Understand her uncomfortable. Love her awkward. Adore her whole. Respect her being. Embrace her difficult. Cuddle her complexity. Caress her chaos. Hold her honest. Take her broken; lick it”