Monday, March 9, 2026
Spring Break Travels
Sunday, March 8, 2026
A Poem for International Women's Day
Today is International Women's Day. I realize that I am luckier than many women throughout the world. I have part-time work that I can do in the wee, small hours of the morning--or any time and place that I can get an Internet connection. I have a full-time job that pays me a decent salary with decent benefits. I am safe at both jobs, and my employers deposit my pay without incident. I also have a part-time preaching job that feeds my soul in a different way.
I have a lovely house in a relatively safe neighborhood. I have food in my kitchen and a way to keep it safe until I'm ready to cook it.I have a bit of time here and there to do the activities that nourish me: reading and a variety of creative work. I have time to see friends. My family members are in good shape.
We are bombarded, day after day, with stories of women who have not been so lucky, reminding us that we still have work to do.
I'm thinking of the multitude of poems that I've written about gender and history and all of those intersections. Here's a poem that I wrote years ago that says a lot about the life of a certain class of women in modern, capitalistic countries. It's part of my chapbook, Life in the Holocene Extinction.
The Hollow Women
We are the hollow women,
the ones with carved muscles,
the ones run ragged by calendars
and other apps that promised
us mastery of that cruel slavedriver, time.
We are the hollow women
with faces carved like pumpkins,
shapes that ultimately frighten.
We are the hollow women
who paint our faces the colors
of the desert and march
ourselves to work while dreaming
of mad dashes to freedom.
At night, the ancient ones speak
to us in soft, bodily gurgles
and strange dreams from a different homeland.
We surface from senseless landscapes
to wear our slave clothes
and artificial faces, masks
of every sort. We trudge
to our hollow offices to do our work,
that modern drudgery,
filing papers and shredding documents,
the feminine mystique, the modern housework,
while at home, domestics
from a different culture care
for the children.
Friday, March 6, 2026
Spring Weather and Spring Break and Villanelles
Thursday, March 5, 2026
Generational Milestones
Wednesday, March 4, 2026
Poetry and Current Events
Here we are, day five of the Iran war--or is it year 46, if we date it to the 1979 take-over of the embassy? Or earlier, given our interactions in that country during the years of the Shaw.
Yesterday on my way home, I noticed that gas was at $2.99 a gallon, up from $2.49 a gallon in the morning when I left. On some level, I shouldn't have been surprised. Long ago, when the Kuwait interaction went from Desert Shield to Desert Storm, I went right to the gas station, but it was much longer before gas prices rose. That's my memory, although I wasn't commuting at the time, so I might not have been as focused on gas prices. I was a poor grad student, so I might have noticed.
Back then, my brain was focused on the war. I wrote poems about people in war zones, a poem that contrasted me washing dishes in solitude to someone trying to keep body and soul together in a bomb shelter. They weren't good poems, but I mention it because decades later, I'm able to move throughout the day without my brain returning to the drum beat of war.
That's not to say that I've ignored the issue, just that I've gotten more skilled at compartmentalizing it all.
Part of me also assumes that people in charge have information that I don't. This Washington Post article by Jim Geraghty argues that most presidents become war hawks as they see top secret briefings during their tenure, and that makes sense to me. This New York Times article by Brett Stephens makes a case for military action against Iran.
This is not to say that I'm just fine with these military actions. I'm always wary, because I've had a lifetime of hearing leaders tell us that we can do a limited intervention, and these things almost always spiral out of control and have all sorts of unintended consequences. I can read, and I know that throughout history, military actions almost always spiral out of control and have all sorts of unintended consequences.
I've been thinking about my undergraduate days, when my favorite Literature professor told us that poems that engaged specific current events were never any good. I argued fiercely with her; I thought that poetry needed to be involved in the real world. I still believe that, although right now, I'm not producing any poems, of any quality, that are about this war. Similarly, I haven't written poems about Gaza or Ukraine (maybe obliquely?) or any other hot spot.
Some part of me thinks that 500 years from now, if humans survive, people will look at us and marvel that we started these wars and refused to focus on the climate disasters bearing down on us--and I have written about that historic event from a variety of angles.
But like so many humans through history, I continue moving through my day, feeling powerless, even if I knew what I thought should happen, and I don't. I continue moving through my days, feeling fortunate to be far away from the theatre of war and feeling guilty about my good fortune. I move throughout my days, documenting regular people approaches to current events, even if I'm not writing poems about those current events.

