Evening

Evening bestows it’s benediction.
The tired land bows to receive.

Under a gray and faltering light
sensations of calm surcease
send serene sensuous waves out
into the deep pools of night.

Segments of deepening shadow form
between woven branch threads –
the entwining interstices reveal
time caught, for a moment,
then released to swim again.


Portland, Oregon – May 18, 2020

Shifting World

When the world shifts
I must shift
or walk along the road
where time has gone.

My tasks and the world
shift under pressure –
when a small thing,
a stone in a shoe,
stops the big things.

Tasks remain to do
when the sun rises.
When night comes
I lay them down
to sleep and dream.


Portland, Oregon – April 8, 2020

The Closing Door

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Fairy door on oak – November 29, 2016

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Fairy door on oak – February 11, 2020

One day the fairies will close their doors
lock the locks and retreat to the places
where, though we may seek them,
we’ll not be able to find them.

The welcome offered by the green
glorious world may be withdrawn;
the joyful play of creation in the garden
of time – the cosmos in slants of sunlight
on the floors, shadows in corners, swaying
branch movements in the pale air – may
no longer find a place in human words.

Still there is time, the precious gift
given, offered to peoples who alone
count the minutes, stash them away
into the past, wondering, fearful,
how many more may yet be theirs.


Portland, Oregon – February 18, 2020

This is our front yard oak tree, damaged by a hit and run driver. The injury is giving way to the healing work of a great tree.  I like to think that the artwork of our granddaughter, Audrey, acted as a bandage to assist in the healing process.  Then, all the children in the three years since who have stopped to play by that door.

Day’s End

Each day is an end –
a sun’s set or moon’s fall
over the horizon’s hidden edge.
It was always that way,
always that way.
We will go over our own horizon
one day, our dazzling sun
aflame in the tapestry of heaven –
that twinkling star far away
from someone watching out there.

This day’s end will be a winter sun
setting over the windy Oregon coast –
ocean gobbling up the flames,
rain cooling the waters.
The moon will wander
between clouds and the night
to mark the end of another day.


Portland, Oregon – January 1, 2020

Sentient World

I sit outdoors in every weather
letting come, inside or out, what comes.
Today it is steady rain and chill.
I take cover in the garage
sitting on a camp chair
before the open door.
I see down the long drive
the last oak leaves hanging on
in the face of December
soon to fall to winter’s floor.

Out in Cascadia’s realm I am
being drawn into the phenomenal world
scented in the calm and quiet of natural life –
wild and mysterious in sensual appeal.

Wool cap and down jacket, warm boots,
fingerless gloves for work –
finger tips getting cold now.
The steady rain turns to a slow drizzle
as my thoughts slow and still.
I hear whispers out there, seekers
searching for listeners.
The sentient world
trying to tell me something.

Here I am.


Portland, Oregon – December 7, 2019

Time and the Flow of Assets

What follows is a long reflection, something I wrote in a flurry several years ago, to help me make my decision regarding retirement.  I forgot all about this writing until I found it today, being more than three years since I retired from the world of work.


Time, Retirement, and the Flow of Assets

For a time, I did not work or earn any income at all. That was when I was a baby up until I was ten years old.  My earnings during these years came in the form of memories.  Time was laid out in seasons of playing on the summer grass, rolling in the winter snows, batting balls, throwing footballs. What joy was mine that I did not then realize – chickens in the coop, worms in the back field, delicious apples for the picking, grapes from my grandmother’s vines.  Hers was a big old house with a certain dark and warm closet that held fresh eggs mother sent me to fetch. We had that whole small town block to ourselves, us kids, mostly my cousins, who lived within the borders of State, Alice, Westover, and Wadsworth streets. At five years old I walked to kindergarten by myself (five short blocks) even through the snow drifts of a Michigan winter. The only monetary assets I acquired in those lean years came from the tooth fairy and from whatever coins I found that had fallen into the deep recesses of the couch from out of my father’s pockets.

At ten years, I moved my childhood from the sacred confines of our small town block to the our bright Broadway called Newman Street. I took my first job, shining shoes and sweeping floors, at Schreiber’s Barber Shop, for $2.50 a week. With it I bought happiness – candy from Dimmick’s Drug Store, two doors down. At the time, my Dad worked for O’Conner’s Pendleton Shop, just up the block towards the dock on Tawas Bay, while my mother managed the Mill End Store, just across the street, where could be procured an eclectic mix of dry goods, from boots to fabric to fishing poles. We all walked home from our labors, just six blocks away.
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At twelve, I began to deliver the Bay City Times, riding a Sears’s bike, on a long route with thirteen subscribers, from the pick-up point at Hennigar’s Men’s Shop (also on Newman Street), along the waterfront through East Tawas, and ending far out on Tawas Point road where the rich lived. I did not deliver to them however. I believe their newspaper deliveries (the Detroit Free Press or News) must have been special delivered to their beachfront homes from the lucky guys who had those preferred routes.  I did not mind. My dad was a union guy and we weren’t so keen on cozying up to the rich and famous. How little I knew then. My less well-heeled customers paid me in quarters and dimes. One left my payment in a bowl in the front parlor. I walked in, took the money, and never saw to whom I delivered the evening news. How could I know then what those quarters and dimes and nickels would mean to me? With them I opened a savings account at Peoples State Bank (underwritten by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation) on the corner of Newman and State streets. Newman and State streets! They formed the great financial intersection of my young life. I was born and raised on East State Street. My livelihood was earned solely on the two block length of the heart of Newman Street. I was on my way. It was 1965.

I began my vocational life in earnest when I took a “stockboy” position at Mooney’s Ben Franklin Store where I spent my High School years stocking shelves with toys, cosmetics, candy, beach balls, and, in December, put together samples of artificial Christmas trees. That wonderful institution anchored the north end of the most affluent block of Newman Street. After school on Wednesdays and into Wednesday evenings, I took in stock from the huge Ben Franklin truck that arrived from Bay City, boxes sliding down steel rollers in the alley at the back of the store. I unpacked the boxes and verified their contents. Always the same, week after week. Up the block, my Dad was doing the same, only his inventory consisted of beautiful Pendleton Woolen Mills shirts, colorful globes, and barometers encased in woods of cherry and maple. Mom, across the street, along with her cadre of women, were busy unloading boxes of this and that and who knew what from week to week?  At Mooney’s Ben Franklin, I swept the floors, washed the windows, and, on Saturday mornings, drove to the dump in old Mr. Mooney’s red International Scout, out past G’nath Hill, on the way to Silver Valley.

These years follow me wherever I go.  All of the income I earned at Mooney’s was properly identified to the Social Security Administration. I can look it up online now and see it, that bit of my future assets in seed form, growing from those days more than 40 years ago. I began to learn the value of money, what it could do, other than buy happiness and candy. At the end of those three years, with $600 earned at Mooney’s Ben Franklin and stashed away at Peoples State Bank, I was able to put a down-payment on a pretty little 1971 clementine orange VW SuperBeetle! Three years later, living in Las Vegas by then, I had an encounter with a 1952 Dodge pick-up truck, or was it a Sherman Tank? Being my fault completely, I traumatized the owners but did little to damage that truck. I could not afford to fix my VW and drove it seven more years, looking like a freakish monster deformed beetle! As it was, I could only afford my rent and groceries from the something more than minimum wage I earned working at the Las Vegas Review-Journal, running tear sheets to Skaggs Drugstores and the Dunes Hotel on “the Strip.”

That is litany enough – a taste of what was to come.
What I did not know then, I now know.
I had begun to count my life’s time as income earned or assets gained.
What I’ve added to assets, I’ve subtracted from time – shall I call it life?
Was it worth the cost? Now we shall see.
Now, I must reverse this equation.
I must subtract from assets gained and spend it on time.
What time I have left that is not retirement.
It is life itself, no less or more than the life I have now.

Will my early retiring (at 62) anxiously follow me?
Like a fearful shadow, not following, but pulling at my every step;
offering strange fears that I will live too long
with my stream of assets fast diminishing?
Will another year in the field of work remove that fear?
No. It will make little difference
except on the projection sheets of a certain Mr. Carroll.
If I work another year will it be, “Now, if only I worked one more…”

It is abundance, we say, of grace poured out, flowing.
What more is there to acquire?
We may make do, over the years we have, of a diminishing capacity to acquire
but what is there to acquire as we age?
Travel perhaps. To see exotic places,
acquire experiences of the new or the old.
We have different tastes and tolerances in this regard.
We will make our decisions.

If we lived still in Seattle how many years more would I work?
This is a question without meaning, a rhetorical question.
We do not live in Seattle anymore.
It is one of many questions, like forks in the road.
It is absurd to ask it or make part of the equation.
It is long gone and I will not go back there
physically, emotionally, or rhetorically.

What other things should I let go of, what questions, what roads?
Would another year increase my “high three?” Indeed it would.
Would it be worth that cost?

The pros and cons. I could list so many and I thought I would
as if I could make of my life some project of data analysis.
Determine the risks, add them up, calculate the costs, set a course, stay true.
But, I have no idea of all the costs ahead, financial or otherwise.
Life isn’t so clean or calculable.
Even if I did add it up, I wouldn’t stick to a course
set a year or twenty years in the past.
I know I’d still want to move as I have moved,
which, while conservative, has not been without creativity and risk.

Enough with asking questions. Declarations are what I need.
I want to retire next year. There it is!
I want to be done with work I do not enjoy.
I want to be done with this commute.
I want to begin my new life, our new life,
whether I know how I will live my days or not.
I do not want to worry about money though I will.
Working another year will not change that.

I will rejoice if I reach tomorrow
not less or more than if I reach my ninety-fifth year
and so begin to fall off the dreadful edge
of Mr. Carroll’s down sloping chart.
His chart is not my future and I will not let it be.
There are many more things to look at, to see
in whatever days I have before me.
I’ll start with my wife and my family.
They mean the world to me and they are my enough.
They cannot be charted or spread-sheeted.

There are words for me to write,
pieces of wood to work, cut, shape, finish,
run my hands over.
There is a work I have to do
though I do not know what it is yet.
I may need that extra year just to sit and let my future come to me,
lay herself before me that I may see her loveliness.
For I say I believe that the Spirit is blowing madly about.
I will, if I have the days, enjoy campfires and ocean shores.
I’ll experience suffering and decay
of my own body or of my family and friends.
Another year of work will change none of that.

I do not know what this stress is doing to me.
I try to think that it is not stress and that I am handling it very well.
But, I feel my blood pressure rising in too many situations.
I wish I could let the circumstances go that bear my stress
but that is not something I have ever successfully done.
I feel fortunate to have come this far in the world of my work
for which I am not entirely suited.
I’ve been faithful.  Whether I work another year will not diminish that.
Twenty four or twenty five years? Ridiculous!
I do not wish to let assets be the determining factor
or the reason for this decision I must make.

Let Mr. Carroll do his work.
We must do ours.
We must consider who we are, our souls, our beliefs,
and trust them above all else.
Trust that our goal is not to live long and spend down our assets,
but rather to live well, age gracefully, grow wiser,
and to know when to let go when our bodies say they are ready.

Our choice might go awry.  What then?
Another unanswerable question.
There are so many ways it could go awry –
sickness, longevity, financial or ecological disaster.
Let me count the ways.
Will another year of work make the “awry” go away?

Have I made of retirement a god,
an insatiable god who can never be pleased?
Punishment for leaving early.
Punishment for working too long
past the time when my vocational desire
is no longer matched by my desire for the last stage of my journey?

Let others take my chair in the workplace.
I’ve made the mark I will make there
and will leave with the respect of my peers
all younger, moving, striving, up and up – poor them, I sometimes think.

So much energy in thinking about letting go.
So much anxiety in thinking about holding on.
Is it all driven by assets, as if they were the bright and shining star?
My limitless horizon backed against a hard wall?
Instead, they, these blessed and damnable asset, are a wild dog on a leash.
I try to hold them at bay and hope they don’t lash out at me.
They do not have to be.

What then are these assets? Whom do they serve?
Assets – such a sterile and uncompromising concept.
What if I treated them as an organic part of my life –
breathing, growing, entropic, changing?
They are, after all, part of my own work, mind, muscle,
perseverance, loyalty, anxiety, one day after another
showing up and offering such skills and words as I possessed.
Anger too sometimes, irritation, frustration, boredom.
These are the parts of my assets.
Perhaps they need a name that fits their worth.
I will call them gift, portion, share, abundance.
They are ours unless they are gift I give to my beyond.
The name must be one that tells of how I do not own them,
do not possess them, nor they me, indeed, they do not,
except that I act, too often, as if they did.

In me there are small and frightened synapses,
tortured hard and dark veins of anger that feed upon fear,
of things that never were nor will be.
I am so afraid of my own self in the day just beyond me,
when I will not have enough, not have strength.
Maybe now is the time to say to the assets,
“You are not the master of my fate.
You are part of my life, an important part
but you are not worthy of addiction, fear, submission, or exaltation.”
This may be the very time to break the illusion of accumulating more and more.

This is a life decision, a spiritual decision,
a decision borne of the Spirit.
I must continue to believe that,
in everything and on all pathways,
we are held by the Spirit of the living God,
the final arbiter, the source of all assets.
Not Mr. Carroll or his projections.
Not my own ability to make a decision
or to be or not be selfish about what I do or do not want.

There may be another work to do.
What might it be?
This is my lifelong unanswered question.
What do I desire?
To create. That is what there is and little other.
I have a something in me that wants to be –
a word, a craft, a gift above all.
I have a gift, something to give the world –
My family, community, my own soul.

Creation may be the only way for me to stay fully alive, forever.
Not longevity, but generativity;
Arising each morning with a task,
to have in mind and body an appointment with my soul’s task.

It is time and space to give expression to my experience
for how many years I may be graced to have.
How much money is needed for the creative task?
Very little, something other than financial assets,
rather, assets gained by the heart – days in ecclesia
hearing the sublime gospel,
early morning prayer, in the quiet of the seasons;
running in the cold Carson City mornings before work began.
Tedium of work, physical labor, tending the garden,
tending my body, caring for my truest assets –
of flesh and blood, of wedding band, of an Audrey,
and a Roland, of course.

Many are the assets that cannot be measured –
acquired through confusion, failure, expectations thwarted,
all forming a dark and formless cache of my true life.
Loss of friends, betrayal of loved ones,
time wasted that cannot be regained.
Painful memory assets, unforgotten, the weight of darkness
all portions of my life’s acquired assets.

Where might I find these assets on Mr. Carroll’s chart
that shows just when I ought to begin worrying
that I will no longer have enough?

Ah, but I do not feel old as one who “retires.”
It is a word with power, misused,
given too much out of place
saying something about one part of my life
as if I were retiring from life itself.

What else might I call it?
What would help me to break the simplistic
lifelong held spell of this time which comes for some of us?
Transition, passage, threshold?
So formal.
Perhaps I will keep moving
one day to the next, open my eyes to see.
What do I call that way of being?
Aware. Mindful.  Awakened.

I feel no older now that when I earned my first Social Security income,
at Mooney’s Ben Franklin, in 1968, when I was a teenager.
How could it be, that more than forty-five years
do not possess a weight dragging at my body?
It only goes to show, as if it needed showing,
that work and time are not at all the same.
I am something other than what I do or did for a living,
or how much I made in a year or have made through the years.
Some income I’ve saved, and some I’ve spent wastefully.
Some I’ve used to see the world,
some to fix the car or buy the groceries.
Some is gone and some is left.
If I could weigh it all, what was and what will be,
would my past outweigh my future
simply by virtue of number of years, or income earned?
Rather, our life is one weight.
With each day’s passage we shed some of it
and, if it feels heavy, it is an illusion.
We lighten our load with the passing of time
until we reach our last day.
Then, we are a feather blown aloft
so light we are from having spent the last of our assets –
given away all our days and all of our selves.


Portland, Oregon – December 23, 2018

Time and Eternity

Time is a season
passing away.

Time?

These ticking moments
our ocean and air?
Our ground?

Yes.

To the sea the desert is an illusion
as time is to eternity.
She watches over us  –
a loving mother
clapping at first steps
waiting to hear her name.


Portland, Oregon – October 26, 2018

Year End at Neahkahnie

IMG_20171230_091238488.jpg

Under the low arch of the winter sun
we sit on the edge of the year
on the continent’s shoreline fringe
watching wave surges on the headlands
scrying, to read the signs of the times,
to foretell what is to come.

We cast our vision over a gray Pacific
into its depths, out to its tumbling reaches
as a fisherman heaves a line,
to catch what may come from the sea.

Storms hide in the blurred horizon
monsters rise out of the blue.
Sirens cry from billowing mists
as surging swells roll through our dreams
perilous breakers crash onto our lighted shores.

The year brims over its rim urged on
by profound deep vaults of time.
It pours as from a font down and down
bearing faultless light in trailing veils
with streaming banners and twirling ribbons.
The speckled year slips over its blue edge
into sunsets’ serene and golden bowl.


Manzanita, Oregon – December 31, 2017.  Photo taken 12/30/2017 northwest to Neahkahnie mountain.  In the Tillamook tribal language, Neahkahnie means “place of the Creator.”  (https://oregonencyclopedia.org/articles/neahkahnie_mountain/#.WkfwAZVy7X4

Birds of Existence

My past and future exist
nowhere other than as birds
who from the fountain fly
away as the water pours
in wings and they are gone.

Where did they go these birds
of existence flying away?
They were mine I thought
captive somewhere inside me
trembling and I thought it breath
exhaling memories, breathing
in all that I wanted to be –
yet they fly away from this sacred
moment as currents of air
ruffling the overarching leaves.


Portland, Oregon – August 15, 2016

In memory of my father who passed away on this date in 1994.

The Big Trouble

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In deep with time –
travelling companion on the way
parsing the curved paths
dividing the light of the sun
meting out portions of the moon:

“There you may go but
not there, never there.”

A ghost tramples before
and behind, catching
at my heels, breathing
down my skinny neck, creeping
cunning fellow taps
on my shoulder –
when I turn around
like the oldest joke he is
not there, never there.


July 21, 2016 – Portland, Oregon

The image came to me from a Facebook posting but I cannot find good attribution.  I cropped out attribution of the quote to Buddha because my online research did not show that he actually said/wrote this. Nevertheless, the quote – which can be found in many places in the webiverse – is evocative, if a bit “deepity.”

Finally, something obvious – too obvious for verse: Do I have time or does time have me?