The Clouds of Summer

Ballglove 3

As a boy I dreamed,
without understanding or experience,
riddled with self-doubt and anger,
of what I might become.

I laid on the summer green grass
watching the clear blue sky
darken, becoming first a distant rumble
it seemed, then lightning flashes and hard rain.

Years passed. Some dreams I lost
others, unformed, called me
into difficult and strange worlds,
I did not pursue, disappointed when I did.

I am what I never dreamed
a man living in the clear light of day,
like a boy with flesh alive, senses awakened
infused with clear and distinct memories
from one who has never stopped
wondering who he would become.

I remember bright clouds of summer
billowing across the open sky
above the green grass and blue lake.
I would become, I thought,
another me, find a passageway
to some other person who knew about love
found a way through the deep forest
entered the sacred healing grove.

I laid on summer green grass
baseball and glove by my side
watching deepening cloud forms
pass in endless succession –
spiraling vapors, drifting masses
of white, gray, or dense dark
out of which I thought
I might discern my life’s way.
I saw only the widening open sky
an impenetrable portending veil
through which the future
could not penetrate, could not
reach back through to me
tell me what I wished to know
as I laid there, just a boy.

I had not breathed enough or failed enough;
laughed or died enough.
I look back now through cloud layers
shredded by the passing years.
I can see him still lying on the summer grass
ball and glove by his side.
He is ever watching the summer drifting clouds
squinting, wishing to see who he will become,
trying to find – me.


Seattle, Washington – April 2013

Photo is my own. I found the glove in an antique store several years ago. It is very similar to one I would have worn when I was a boy, playing in the 9-year-old league back in the small Michigan town where I grew up.

Reading at Claustrophobia

Your faces I do not know
your skins are new
like mine when I was young
when I saw the pale sun
leaning over my home town
felt the sharp tang of winter
that, without mercy,
stripped away my childhood
my school days
my boyhood friends
my first loves and lost loves.
I – left with only what was to come
times and places unknown,
without hearts, warm greetings
absent friendly faces and kind words;
spaces waiting for me
to step into their paths
write their words
let their futures become flesh in me.

When I turn from here
see your faces no more
I will visit again that formless void
of what will be –
that place that is never filled
always empty, hungry, waiting
for me to step into it
name it
tell its story.


Seattle, Washington – January 28, 2014

Claustrophobia readings present local writers in very small settings in Seattle, hence, “claustrophobia.”  I had never read my works before and a dear friend, Rachel, asked if I would read.  I did, was affirmed beautifully, and I remain grateful for the experience.