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Archive for June, 2023

[with 3 selections from Tar River Poetry]
Letter to the Archaeologists of the Post-Anthropocene
You know already what fools we were,
how like the dog that starts itself awake
we jumped and bared our teeth
and turned to chase our tail, our fury
rising as we spun – and how, unlike the dog,
we did not hold our caught selves
gently, surprised to be at once the captive
and the captor, but chewed our own flesh
bloody, sure we were destroying that
which would destroy us. You already know
we killed our saviors, set fire
to our home, and ate
our bitter hearts. We said
because we owned what we destroyed
it was ours for the destruction,
and we destroyed it
to prove that it was ours.
You know all that.
You may not know, however,
just how much
we loved what we destroyed, how much
we longed to have it love us –
how even the cruelest among us
would stop sometimes to watch
the polluted sky at sunset
turning gold then pink then indigo.
Shane Sheely
from Tar River Poetry, Volume 62, Number 2. Spring 2023. © 2023 TRP
❦ ❦ ❦
Some ten years ago I became a phyto-heterotroph. Many people have asked whether it was a difficult transition and whether I have regrets. Not at all! To borrow a phrase from the general domain of heterotrophs, “Life is good.”
This week I’ve been reintroduced to a community of fellow heterotrophs after a year’s absence. We met in the woods on Grassy Creek’s Forest Bathing trail as they emerged  from the shady gloom, pale as the moon, a little creepy. Their scaly jointed fingers that are not fingers poked up from the leaf mould. They nodded their heads which are not heads. Not human, not fungus. What?
These are plants, flowering plants, but stark white, utterly absent chlorophyll : Ghost Pipes (Heath family, Ericaceae, same family as rhododendron, azalea, huckleberry, but so eerily different). Kneel to inspect the nodding head and you’ll see that it’s a flower, one at the apex of each stem, and indeed shaped like the flowers on my blueberry bushes beside the driveway. I remember the first time I saw these odd creatures in the southern Appalachians, thriving in rich mesic woodland, clustered in deep shade with no need for photons. I was taught that they are white because they’re parasitic, taking nourishment from the roots of trees.
Heterotrophic – fed by others. The opposite of autotrophic, feeding oneself. Most of the Plant Kingdom are autotrophs, industriously creating sugar and cellulose from the nothing of light and CO2. Quite a number in Kingdom Protist are autotrophs (algae, for example), and even a few in the Bacteria Kingdom (cyanobacteria). All the rest of us are unable to feed ourselves. I can make Vitamin D when sunlight strikes my skin, but as an obligate heterotroph I must consume autotrophs to survive.
Personal and Planetary Health—The Connection With Dietary Choices. This is the title of a feature editorial in the Journal of the American Medical Society (June 6, 2023; Volume 329, Number 21). It isn’t difficult to imagine the message the editorialist will promote, but it is novel to emphasize the connection between choices that lead to personal well-being and and choices that promote global health. To quote: Physicians have historically focused on patient health and relegated planetary health to environmentalists and lawmakers. However, dietary choices are the largest driver of chronic diseases. National surveys indicate less than 5% of the US population meets dietary fiber recommendations due to inadequate plant-based food intake. Plant-based diets are also associated with reduced incidence of chronic diseases such as obesity, cardiovascular disease, diabetes, chronic kidney disease, and cancer in multiple studies.
I became a phyto-heterotroph (it’s easier to spell vegetarian) not for personal health but to reduce my ecological footprint. Eating plants instead of eating things that eat plants has a frankly unbelieveable impact on agricultural water consumption, loss of habitat to grazing and animal feedstock production, and methane and nitrous oxide production (25 times and 298 times more potent greenhouse gases than CO2). Even the most diehard omni-heterotroph could probably tolerate a phyto-heterotroph diet one or two days a week.
And those Ghost Pipes (Monotropa uniflora) – I read this week that they are actually myco-heterotrophs. Their roots entangle with and suck sugar from the fungal filaments of the mycorrhizal network that permeates all healthy soil. Alas, all fungi are themselves heterotrophs. They reciprocate with green plants to provide minerals and water in exchange for sugar, some of which they evidently pass on to the Ghost Pipes. Without GREEN, none of us would be here.
❦ ❦ ❦
Because the Demented World Repeats Itself
In Europe again tonight,
a human being is dying
under a bombed-to-rubble house
or in the street – bicycle basket
spilling its loaf of bread.
This particular human is dying
whose dying makes me despair
though I’m no one in particular
and they’re no one in particular
to me. I’m just another human
who will be dying, but not yet,
and who lies warm under my quilt
of many blessings, wondering
what can be done about humans
when I can’t dissuade the sparrow
who attacks our window
slamming and slamming
his reflection – the enemy
he keeps seeing but not
seeing as himself.
Susan Cohen
from Tar River Poetry, Volume 62, Number 2. Spring 2023. © 2023 TRP
❦ ❦ ❦
I don’t subscribe to many literary journals, but I don’t let my Tar River Poetry lapse. Volume 62/Number 2 arrived last week containing a few familiar names but many more names that I now want to remain familiar with. Micro-themes seem to weave through its fifty pages of poetry like a carrier wave that fills the room with music. A few poems juxtaposed are having a conversation, but when the next in line picks up the thread the color and texture have suddenly shifted again. Always something new, always engaging, deeply felt, deeply connecting. Thank you to Luke Whisnant and all the perceptive editors who send me a fresh volume twice a year.
Tar River Poetry is published twice yearly with the support of the Department of English, East Carolina University. http://tarriverpoetry.com. 113 Erwin Hall, Mail Stop 159, ECU, East Fifth Street, Greenville NC 27858-4353.
Shane Sheely has published three books of poetry and directs and teaches in the creative writing MFA program at University of Missouri-St. Louis.
Susan Cohen, author of three full-length poetry collections, is a former journalist living in Berkeley, California.
Steve Cushman’s first poetry collection, How Birds Fly, won the 2018 Lena Shull Book Award of the North Carolina Poetry Society.
❦ ❦ ❦
The Candiru Fish is So Small It Could Swim Up Your Urethra
is what Mrs. Hart, my 9th grade biology teacher, said
thirty-some years ago, so when Julie says let’s go skinny
dipping, instead of being excited I’m transported back to
Mrs. Hart’s class in St. Petersburg where all we had to cool
us off on those Florida afternoons was one lone window unit,
so we sweated through her lectures until the day we sat up
straight and listened as she discussed urethras and penises
and the dangers lurking beneath the surface. Come on, Julie
is saying, naked now, her clothes in a stack at the shore,
her pale shoulders bouncing up and down at the water’s surface.
I strip bare, tell myself we’re nowhere near the Amazon River,
run with everything I have into the water, into Julie’s arms,
and again she’s rescuing me from myself, from my silly fears,
and those murky, dangerous things, seen and unseen.
Steve Cushman
from Tar River Poetry, Volume 62, Number 2. Spring 2023. © 2023 TRP
❦ ❦ ❦
Doughton Park Tree 2020-11-22

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[with poems from PINESONG 2023, NC Poetry Society Anthology]

 

Ghazal: Ghost Apples (Kent County, Michigan)

 

Ice-encrusted boughs from which transparent versions
of apples hang – each fragile as hand-blown glass.
+++
Their history: fruit on the cusp of rot, winter storm trundling
down a hillside, sleet coating each apple in sudden glass.
+++
Viscous fruit leaked from apertures until only icy shells
remained – December trees bearing quicksilver bulbs of glass.
+++
Imagine them a vivid red or green, like cascades of apples
even humble grocery stores offer on the far side of plate glass.
+++
If we shattered these globes, would they taste like hard cider
or the cloying sweetness of pulp, like edible versions of glass?
++++++
Soon these crystalline shells will melt to nothingness, the way
we all disappear. Beloved, step lightly upon grief’s bitter glass.
+++
Lavonne Adams
Joanna Catherine Scott Award First Place, Pinesong 2023
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❦ ❦ ❦
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Diversity often blooms at the edge. This little trail heading out from Isaac’s Trail Head on the MST is limn upon limn . . . boundary . . . transition. The wide riparian border along Grassy Creek attracts neotropical migrants for a rest stop each spring; Louisiana Waterthrush, White-Eyed Vireo, and Common Yellowthroat stay behind to breed here. The footpath parallels a pasture fenceline, and while cows with their calves stand flank-deep in meadow grass and blackberry bramble, all manner of wildflowers hug the margin of No Grazing: Blue Toadflax, Venus’s Looking Glass, Carolina Crane’s-Bill. Leaving creekside, the trail is hemmed by a moist rising woodland: Rattlesnake Fern, Sensitive Fern, Southern Lady Fern. And by the end of summer, if the farmer hasn’t sprayed, the trail edges will fill with Blue-Curl, Cardinal Flower, Goldenrod, Wingstem.
+++
Smaller fields and many interruptions make for many edges; diversity begets diversity. At one point along the trail a wide acreage of corn abuts a small hay field of mixed grasses. The corn field is solemn in its solitude; above the hay the air is filled with swallows, Bluebirds and Phoebes perch along the wire, and as we hike past we’re apt to flush an Indigo Bunting foraging.
+++
But then there are Cowbirds. For centuries they followed prairie bison herds and no doubt also the woodland bison of the Carolina piedmont. Now they follow every human disturbance, common in cow pasture but just as common on suburban lawns. Cowbirds are exclusively brood parasites, known to lay their eggs in the nests of over 220 other species. To their detriment. Kirtland’s Warbler has been pushed beyond the edge of “endangered” by Cowbird predation, and most birds do not have the ability to recognize the foreign eggs which will hatch and out-compete the rightful occupants. How to resist? Escape the edges. Reverse the fragmentation. Cowbirds will not follow into deep woods – warblers nesting deep in the forest are safe.
+++
It isn’t the Cowbird that threatens wood warblers, whip-poor-wills, vireos. It is shrinking habitat. Many species thrive at the edge. Some, though, require wide wild expanses. How much wild can we leave?
+++
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Upon which side of the boundary does poetry perch, thrive or decline? And what would it look like, that restored, invigorated poetry habitat, a definite nudge toward thriving? More fifth graders setting pen to page and seeing their lines is print, as they have in this year’s annual Pinesong anthology by the North Carolina Poetry Society? More opportunities and promptings to write – whatever one’s background, training, preferred theme, chosen form? And more readers?
+++
That’s where we come in. This morning I broke a nice sweat hiking miles along meadow and creek, through upland forest to lakeshore and back. This afternoon with feet up I’ve covered another rewarding meander through the pages of Pinesong. Student poets, grades 4 through undergrad; dozens more of adult poets, many names entirely new to me. I’ve traveled new places, I’ve encountered the unexpected and enlightening, I’ve paused long to reflect, and I’ve even laughed out loud. As Robert Frost wrote in The Pasture: “You come, too.”
+++
❦ ❦ ❦
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Eleven Lines In Search of the Perfect Rhyme
+++
Is it accidental that bereft almost rhymes with death?
+++
Watching geese rise in a chevron formation The New River
at Grassy Creek, flying south to warmer waters, I think of how
+++
sons and daughters grow up, how the nest – that like death
almost rhymes with bereft, – empties with their flight.
+++
How these words fly out of my mouth like startled birds.
+++
How we dream of loved ones who are dead. How we forget
what happened in the dream, what we did, what we said.
+++
How there are hundreds of ways to leave, not only the 50 ways
in Paul Simon’s song, and thousands of ways to grieve, bereft.
+++
How you can both the lover leaving and the lover left.
+++
Beth Copeland
Carol Bessent Hayman Poetry of Love Award Honorable Mention, Pinesong 2023
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❦ ❦ ❦
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Pinesong is the annual publication of contest winning poems by the North Carolina Poetry Society, founded in 1932. Pinesong 2023 is Number 59, edited by Sherry Pedersen-Thrasher with assistance from Joan Barasovska. This year’s volume is dedicated to David Radavich, former NCPS President and steadfast supporter of poetry and the arts.
+++
You can learn more about North Carolina Poetry Society and its contests, plus read previous years’ editions of Pinesong . . . here.
+++
If you would like to purchase Pinesong ($12, postage included) please contact NCPS Vice President of Membership Joan Barasovska: msjoan9[at]gmail[dot]com
+++
A free issue of Pinesong is available to all NCPS members in good standing who request ($2 mailing expense). Please contact Joan, as above.
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❦ ❦ ❦
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2020-09-08b Doughton Park Tree

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EDGE – part one

[with poems from PINESONG 2023, NC Poetry Society Anthology]

 

Preservation

Even with the old house gone, ground smoothed
and seeded, other centuries erased,
we tell of Grandmother’s death
in a bedroom right about here.
+++
Tell how the kitchen floor sagged
as our mother, age five, made biscuits
afraid she would be spanked
if the didn’t rise to suit her mother.
+++
Tell how the old woman at last
spoke kindly to her only daughter
who sacrificed for weeks to buy the dress
her mother would wear only in her coffin.

+++
We never knew this grandmother, just
that our mother retold those tales never understanding
how a person can forsake life itself.
What to do with that choice?
+++
We remember the stories, pass them down
with our own embroidered feelings
in the fabric. We tell of Ethel’s first husband,
our grandfather, dead at thirty-six,
+++
who planted orchards and a vineyard.
We visit him in apples and pears,
retelling what became of his children,
what his absence has meant.
+++
We even imagine the coconut meringue pie
served at Grandmother’s wake,
toasted and dotted with sugar pearls –
so good it made mourners glad to be alive.
+++
Our mother smiled as we licked the story from our lips.
And each of learned to make this pie
just as Mother taught us, preserving
something sweet from every dark remembrance.
+++
I wish a kindly wind could blow away
the hurts of ages past, resettle the ashes
in pleasing ways, retell the stories with humor,
with morals to live by and cherish,
+++
but here we are, generations later, quibbling
whether families live and grow by story.
What of fact? Genealogy provided dates
and places, names and maps.
+++
The great grandfather who fought on both sides
in the Civil War, the uncle lost in Korea,
the orphaned grandfathers indentured to farmers.
Mother already had Alzheimer’s, told me,
+++
pointing to Daddy, Oh, honey, I can’t remember
and he lies. I don’t know what you’ll do for the truth.
Perhaps siblings never agree, once parents are gone.
Now we struggle to hold onto something vital:
+++
that places hold the sounds and scents
of lives passed there, that stout maples
and great-grandfather pecan trees remember
their youth, that all that ever was still is,
+++
that what has been preserved remains,
a family farm in Yadkin County, now
in its last iteration. Chant home like an incantation.
Weave a thread of truth in the weft.
+++
Is it enough to sustain family?
To embody story kindly?
And how to teach future generations
to savor what they refuse to know?
+++
A storm comes up, the wind and rain
sweeping the fields we work, the same
ground our great great-grandfathers tilled.
We shriek, wanting to run away,
+++
and Mother lets us go. She stays, leaning on her hoe,
takes off her straw hat and lifts her face to the rain,
a benediction. Grace, acceptance, story.
This is my Something to preserve.
+++
Jane Shlensky
Poet Laureate Award, Pinesong 2023
+++
❦ ❦ ❦
+++
How would you describe this little bird we’re hearing? Squeaky? About one octave below dog whistle? Here’s a big clue: couplets, always couplets, each longer phrase built from couplets. Peaches, Peaches, Sweety, Sweety, See Me!
+++
He’s perched at the edge. (Reminder to self, look higher than it sounds like I need to.) There he is, right at the edge of the big maple where the leaves peter out until we might actually have a good chance of spotting him. The edge of the treeline between cow pasture and copse: his preferred habitat is at the very edge, securing both cover for nest and forage for seeds & spiders. And at the edge of survival, on which side is he perched, thrive or decline?
+++
This Indigo Bunting and his two rivals nearby, all singing non-stop, flew 1,200 miles from Central America to arrive here a few weeks ago. He has found this little patch of Mountains-to-Sea Trail in Surry County very much to his liking, rural fragmentation, edge habitat at the merger of field and scrub. He and his cohorts are thriving. There are currently most likely many more Indigo Buntings covering a much larger geography than were here in North America before the colonists arrived. Last Saturday I ran my annual USGS Breeding Bird Survey count, my twenty-eighth run since 1995 (50 designated stops, count every bird seen or heard in three minutes). With rare exceptions, each year Indigo Bunting tops the individual tally. Despite woodlots harvested, farms planted with new homes, over-tended monoculture lawns, Bunting still finds enough fallow, neglected, brushy edge to make a living.
+++
And perhaps these Indigo Buntings also top the count of those seen and heard because they are such indefatigable singers, all day long, song after song, in every weather.
+++
There are winners and losers whenever humans move into the neighborhood. We planted nesting boxes and brought Bluebirds back from the brink. We tore down the woods and let our (F-word) cats range free and I’ve only heard two Whip-poor-wills since 2007. Some species seek out the edge habitat we create in our diced up rural landscape, some will even come to our feeders, but as I read through my yearly USGS data I wonder how much longer I’ll still be hearing vireos, tanagers, wood warblers. So many on the edge.
+++
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Poetry must seek out habitat where it can grow and thrive. When 150 listeners gathered at Weymouth Center in Southern Pines two weeks ago to hear poems read aloud from the newest issue of Pinesong, the ground of creativity burst its constrained borders into fresh and fertile fields. The North Carolina Poetry Society sponsors sixteen annual contests for individual poems, with a wide diversity of requirements, themes, forms, and prompts. The fruit of that diversity, the poems of the winners, is collected each year into this single volume. We open the book to read like walking a trail that winds from one discovery to the next.
+++
Poetry needs this edge, this sharp stab of novelty and this precarious but visible perch of invention and insight. An exploration, an awakening, a fulfillment. I am always glad to hear a song I can recognize. I am even more filled with joy to learn a new song.
+++
❦ ❦ ❦
+++
Henna
+++
The world misunderstands:
The stained designs of my homeland
Are not a fashion statement, but a
Statement of my mind.
People ask – they can’t help it
Might as well have committed
Bloody murder for the way they stare.
Try to act unaware when I’ve been caught red-handed.
Eyes like magnets to the henna; I wish I could disguise
The distaste on their faces but it’s lace
In every look they send, cant pretend it’s easy to withstand
They could never understand . . .
Because how do I tell them it’s my one way of feeling visible?
Oh, how I want to be seen. Just
Picture the scene:
The brown girl to dark for passing but
Too light to avoid them asking about whether I’m Mexican
Or next of kin to become the chief of a tribe but who actually
Comes from the place even Columbus couldn’t find.
Imagine being stranded at sea: alone and lost the
Ocean a pounding current of blows, it
Beats you and cheats you and goes to show
How scars can sprout
Without being sown.
The henna paste soothes the pain.
Though replaced with stains the scars remain.
A silent scream to the world around me
I will be know in this country!
Until then, inked flowers will bloom along my palm, vines
Shall curl around my fingers in song.
Let this garden surround you
With its beauty; it belongs.
+++
Kiran Singh
8th Grade, Cary Academy
Mary Chilton Award Honorable Mention, Pinesong 2023
+++
❦ ❦ ❦
+++
Pinesong is the annual publication of contest winning poems by the North Carolina Poetry Society, founded in 1932. Pinesong 2023 is Number 59, edited by Sherry Pedersen-Thrasher with assistance from Joan Barasovska. This year’s volume is dedicated to David Radavich, former NCPS President and steadfast supporter of poetry and the arts.
+++
You can learn more about North Carolina Poetry Society and its contests, plus read previous years’ editions of Pinesong . . . here.
+++
If you would like to purchase Pinesong ($12, postage included) please contact NCPS Vice President of Membership Joan Barasovska: msjoan9[at]gmail[dot]com
+++
A free issue of Pinesong is available to all NCPS members in good standing who request ($2 mailing expense). Please contact Joan, as above.
+++
❦ ❦ ❦
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