Sunday, April 11, 2010

Poetry and Dreams

In this last week, the dreams are battering me, one after another, each strong and filled with potential meaning. As the dreams come, so do the poems. Arriving one after another. So since all my writing is coming in poetry, it probably should appear here as well. (brand new hot off the press)

Boulder Love Poem

This place has always held me,
from the cradle of sandstone to each rock,
each curve on the road, to the tops of towering ledges.
They have witnessed those who came before me,
each generation linking one to another
to culminate in me.
At fourteen, I was drunk with this place.
Overwhelmed by all it possessed,
maybe it was that time of life when I could not control
the effect or I may have chosen
not to ignore it. I was madly in love,
the passion of place consumed me like a fire,
threatening to destroy me with intensity.
I was released from the hold just a little
when I found the one who would become my husband,
sharing my desire between place and man.
I learned moderation of this place,
small doses, a weekend, a week,
creeping up to three weeks and a month.
I would once again be dragged back
to the edge of desire, to sit on a sandstone peak,
wade in Calf Creek or allow the sun
to hike across my body while I leaned on a rock
at the edge of Grass Lake.
As I ride my fifties, I am embolden,
for the children are raised and a retirement check
arrives each month. I have lived a good life.
I return bravely to sleep night after night
on the banks of Boulder Creek.
I invite the beautiful of snow on Maggie’s Ledge,
to burn my eyes. My legs carry me
to each entrance of the Escalante River.
I embrace Upper Falls as winter breaks to spring,
allowing myself to fall so deeply in love
that I should be afraid. I will never escape
something this beautiful.

5 comments:

  1. Wonderful poem with subtle, deep meaning.
    I love it and I am captured by
    the things you love. Captured by the past and what I loved. Did you take a picture of our swimming pond?

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  2. Beautiful poem, Cheryl. I really love your poems. Seems like you are not the first of family to fall in love with this rough country which can be so dangerous if you are not prepared for it. I think you have learned to be sensible when dealing with it, which seems to keep people safe harm.

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  3. I have always wanted to write poems about that country...I think your poem is beautiful. It is hard to write and catch what Boulder is, but I think you did in this poem. I loved the book Ann sent me of David Lee, he caught some of it, but he has never really lived in it like we have. Sometimes I feel I know every turn of the Boulder road.
    It seemed each day going to school on the Bus you saw more and more.

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  4. I too loved your poem very much. You have the ability to get the subtitles while still going very deep with meaning. I always thought you were a great little poet (back when you were much younger and allowed yourself to be very intense. i occasionally still enjoy reading your poems about Livey. Keep on dreaming and sharing the poems that follow.

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  5. I love this poem too, and so relate to it. There are so many things that happen in Boulder, so many unexpected moments. Images that always 'call you back', again and again. Each time I prepare to travel there for the summer, it seems I'm spent, then when I arrive I immediately begin to fill up again. Beautiful poem, beautiful words, beautiful place. I like the line about the intensity that almost killed you... can so relate, so relate. See you soon.

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