Thursday, November 23, 2017

To a different place and a different topic

When are apologizes really needed or wanted? When are they just empty words for show?

Apology Not Accepted


You were not there. You were wrapped up and insulated
when the white men dragged him away from his home
and his mother. She was crying; all of his family were crying.

You were not there. You were just un petit garçon mignon
in your father’s mind when the old white haired men ,
severely dressed in white and black,
shaved his hair, robbing him of his ancestors.

You were not there. You were just playing tag and
skating on ice-covered ponds with boys from your neighbourhood.
Speaking only English and eating him boiled potatoes and
(shoe leathered) beef, he forgot who he was
as days turned to months, then to years, then to eternity.

You were not there. So why apologize for something
you did not have a hand in? Your words are so empty, like
he is inside
without his protectors
those who came through before him
like the bear, the crow, the eagle, the frog.


© Catherine Woods 2017

Wednesday, November 22, 2017

Opening Up About the Reality is Front of my Eyes

Reaching the Crossroads; What's the Path Forward

Your faith is not my faith,
Your beliefs are not my beliefs.
You read the Book, I ignore the stories.

We are all live together,
We can all say the words.

Faith is mysterious,
Truth is undeniable,
Passion is sacred,
We are one equally,
without we die out.


No One is Listening

Epochs of history follow us through the ages
wondering how our silence exists. Homelessness shouts out loud 
but is ignored by the masses. A murder of crows sleeps on, but a sleuth
of bears or a herd of elephants are targets for big-game hunters
and the NRA faithful showing their trophies; cubs nor calves
feel pain (so British MPs have decreed). Murder is killing whether humans or puppies,
foxes or terrapins, right whales or puffins; life is gift to be shared with 
all living organism from simple to complex. Hunters are bullies; 
lessons unlearned unleash sorrows for all.


© Catherine Woods 2017


Monday, November 20, 2017

When It's Time to Say Goodbye to a Family Pet

One of the hardest things I've ever done. Luckily I had my family with me.

When It’s Time 

You look so sad. The pain you try to hide from me 
is still apparent in your eyes, in your gait. You walk as if on broken glass
among the ruins of a darkened castle, unannounced.
I feel your shudder as you circle to find comfort
on a friendly lap. I feel ashamed to want you
to continue living on though in great pain. I cannot bring myself to say
Goodbye.
Farewell  my love,
sleep the peaceful sleep of angel choirs (or 
whatever doggies dream of when they close their eyes forever).
I am a coward to keep your warmth with me at night.
I know the time will come when I must
let you go. Still I hold on to you and push off the Decision 
for another day, hoping that you will rebound, and live on
Forever.
By my side,
the bestest buddy that I’ve ever had,
my faithful companion on Sunday morning walks through Cloverdale,
the one I choose to spend every wintery evening with.
You raise your head and pierce my heart with your brown eyes, and then
I know I must let you go. I make the call.


© Catherine Woods 2017

Monday, November 13, 2017

Letting My Thoughts Wander ...

after an unexpected prompt from an interesting source I came up with these today.

Poetry Is …

Poetry is a new dawn on an unsuspecting day,
partially full of bright lights and cherries. Poetry is a
blow out for my birthday and the living dead on sale
though peace is misunderstood. Poetry is infused with
sweetness and temper and organized for the reactive war
destined to reclaim our humanity. Poetry is
you and me and the planet and the galaxy and
the big bang and …
the end.


© Catherine Woods 2017


Poetry Was …

Those words those poets wrote, still stand
against the ages, between then and now. The meter, that they
voiced, held aloft the days of time unscripted. Above all else,
his wisdom brought forth his purpose, and, without his genius,
we could not hope to travel to ancient lands or make mysteries unfold.
Why is the purpose of one letter followed by another yet unclear?
What keeps his meaning clear for you and not for me?
Is all he said forgotten by the passages of days and hours or
are those gems of shade and colour and prose and phrase lost
in a space of ideal reverence unclaimed? Weep no more. Wish
upon a starry, starry night and see truth as beauty and beauty truth.

Inside a vision is a hidden message; 
we are all alone, within ourselves
completed.


© Catherine Woods 2017

Saturday, November 11, 2017

Remembrance Day 2017

I've posted these before, but they are appropriate for today.

In Flanders

Fields, mostly green, dotted with red
As far as the eye can see
As far as a wounded man can walk in a day
Think back to days of WWI
Think back to John and his friend Alexis
Search for the patch of land when many lives were lost
Search for the memories they want to forget
Rows of crosses mark their final rest
Rows of soldiers fall, gently through the fields of grass
Hear the shots
Hear the cries
See the pain
See the futility of all this bloodshed
Of all this waste of youth
Of all this waste of generations
Fields, mostly red, remind us of the past
And pass the torch along


© Catherine Woods 2010


Aubade at Vimy

         To commemorate the 100th anniversary of the Battle on April 9, 1917

We storm the ridge at 5:30 am.
Plan and rehearse.

More than 15,000 Canadian infantry, 
four Canadian divisions, 
we attack together for the first time.
Training behind enemy lines, 
we use models to represent the battlefield.
Engineers dug deep tunnels from the rear to the front line.
Many had specialist roles as machine-gunners, 
rifle-men, and grenade-throwers.
Plan and rehearse.

Devastating artillery barrage would isolate enemy trenches.
A moving wall of high explosives and shrapnel would force the Germans 
to stay in their deep dugouts and away from their machine-guns.
Our artillery pounded the enemy positions on the ridge, 
killing and tormenting defenders this past week.
Plan and rehearse.
 
Who of us will get to go home to Saskatchewan farms and Newfoundland fisheries?
We will fight for days, weeks, if necessary.
We will fight as one unit, as one nation called Canada. 
Plan and rehearse.
We storm the ridge at 5:30 am tomorrow.


© Catherine Woods 2017


D Day

A day we must not forget
The beach was long and sandy
The troops were sitting ducks
The sky was filled with clouds
The boats kept coming
The Germans kept shooting
The Allies kept dying
We keep remembering June 6, 1944


© Catherine Woods 2017


Friday, November 10, 2017

Too Many Books, Too Little Time, Too Hard to Question, Too Easy to Forget

I can't be the only person questioning my reasons for being. It's taken me a long, long time to speak out. Even if no one answers me back, I know that I've done my part in opening the door and yelling at the top of my lungs.

38 Years of Forgetting

The Paris sun rose today
on a memory of another morning.
Mama was drinking her favourite coffee,
thick and sweet.
I was savouring my breakfast slowly
delaying the inevitable walk to classes
and bullying by the older and taller boys.
She was humming an old familiar tune,
a lullaby she used to sing to me at bedtime
when I was 5 or 6 and innocent and free.
It was the sun-sky  shades of pink and purple and
orange that drew me back to that morning
the last morning I ever saw Mama alive.

While I was at school, she died while scrubbing dishes.
While I was at school, my innocence was tossed away.

As the sun rose today,
I cry for Mama
and heal a little more.



© Catherine Woods 2017

Saturday, November 4, 2017

Saturday Night Thoughts

A mash-up of thoughts on Saturday night.

I close my eyes

Words appear on this page
as if from magic or witchcraft,
but they are neither. It is only my muse
speaking out
loud and strong and clearly
making herself heard. Like a siren, she
draws me into her spell; her on the rock, solid as
diamond, whispering, weaving her words through
my mortality; me flailing about, treading water
unsuccessfully, drowning in visions of
chaos and wonder.  Then I awaken to
books, papers, and abstracts, knowing I’m concrete and
sentient and safe in reality,
until the next time that I close my eyes.


© Catherine Woods 2017


I am not to blame 

You are still here
sleeping in the bed I bought you years ago
watching NetFlix’s movies I play for.
Baking and
pulling weeds:
when will you go? Not that I’m throwing you out,
but I should. I should move
all your things onto the driveway. I should change
the locks. But I can’t.
Maybe I am to blame (a little).
I should have pushed you at 20, at 23, at 25.
I didn’t because I wanted you safe.
I understand now I’ve done you a terrible disservice by
not making you go.
Ok I’m to blame. I’m a terrible mother.
Hanging on when I shouldn’t,
not charging you room and board,
making it much too easy for you to stay.
But no no NO NO NO
I am not to blame,
maybe no one is,
but things have definitely got to change.

© Catherine Woods 2017

Circle 

Leaves,
haphazardly crisp on the city sidewalk,
fortell the fated future
of our lives. Death is inevitable,
change is inevitable,
renewal is inevitable. What today is organic litter
will in six months be fuel for
Spring’s rebirth.

© Catherine Woods 2017

I was born

I was born in Montreal
on a rainy Wednesday. My father was out of town.
I went to 13 elementary schools
in 13 years. My father changed jobs more often
than he took me to Dairy Queen.
I left home to go to university. My father wanted me to become
a doctor; I didn’t. I started
to spill my emotions on the page.
I started to feel like a human being
for the first time in my life.

I was born in Kingston,
alone and afraid and
ready to live
as someone important.

© Catherine Woods 2017



For shame. I've forgotten to post.

Just realized I haven't posted since last May. I'll try to be better in future. Dust to Dust Someone let a fly inside the house inst...