Illustrated Poem: Joy is

I enjoy illustrating poems. I mostly use old pictures of my kids or animals or flowers or even myself as models/guides for my illustrations. Sometimes I combine pictures. This is a good example of that. I took an old picture of my daughter, put her on a picture of my current neighborhood and traded her hair for curlier hair because that’s how I pictured the child in my poem. The hardest part of this picture? Getting the flesh tone right.

Joy is
By Michelle Garren-Flye

Joy is an unruly child

she belongs to one of the neighbors
I know not which
but she pops in unexpectedly
then disappears for months on end
just as I get used to having her around

she has a mop of golden curls
like an angel’s halo
she’s loud and boisterous
for a while
then tiptoes out
and I don’t realize
she’s gone
until I miss her

I wish I knew to whom she belonged
and I’d be able to seek her out
when light and sparkle have dulled
and I want someone to sing me a song

but instead I just have to sit and wait
as evening shadows creep up on me
hoping the next step on the walk
will be the dancing one I recognize

Illustration and poem copyright 2024 Michelle Garren-Flye

A fun exercise with a poem: For Basho

Today I did something kind of fun. I have a book of Matsuo Basho’s haiku on my desk that I often read when I’m experiencing writer’s block. It’s a beautiful book even though now it’s a bit beat up and coffee-stained. But the pages are full of haiku by the master of haiku. Sometimes when I read them, I feel like I can picture him on his travels, taking inspiration from the simplest of things, writing his verses even in discomfort, possibly hungry, cold, stuck in bad weather, probably tired.

And then I wonder how on earth I can claim any adversity at all.

At any rate, today I was reading some Matsuo Basho and I found this one:

snow on snow

this night in December

a full moon

—Matsuo Basho

I’m currently editing my book Winter Solstice for republishing so this little haiku caught my attention, especially when I read the backstory of it. Basho wrote it for two fellow poets who were arguing, hoping by pointing out the beauty of the moon’s glow on the snow, he could defuse the fight.

I don’t know if it worked for them, but it gave me something to think about. I wondered what it would be like to write a sonnet with the same idea. So I did.

For Basho
By Michelle Garren-Flye

Why persist in impatience and strife?
When yonder field full of starflowers
reflects the moon’s light into our life,
how can this world of war be ours?

Sit here beside me, give me your cares.
Worries, bad habits, and visions begone!
Along with all the stuff of your nightmares—
the ones that sometimes linger on.

This world is full of beauty, you know:
meadows turned into a galaxy of stars
by nothing more than the moon’s glow
concealing all of our cuts and scars

Take heart! Come with me and dance
in soft grass among stars and planets.

It’s hard to remember sometimes that our world has been through a lot and survived. Sometimes the news makes it seem we are on the brink of all the disasters. Politicians make money off our fears, the media churns out new ones every day. But today I saw a Monarch on a bunch of pink lemonade lantana, and it made me happy.

Photo and poem copyright 2024 Michelle Garren-Flye

Poem: Call Me Destructor

So, yesterday, when I might or might not have preferred to be watching anime, I mowed the lawn. My lawn hadn’t been mowed in about two weeks, and it had, in the meantime, been watered well by the rains of a tropical storm. It was thick, lush, quite tall, and inhabited by many crickets, spiders, moths, mosquitoes, and some very pretty green bugs with lacy wings.

It was an entire habitat.

Needless to say, in my little urban neighborhood, said habitat had to go. Not to mention that it also probably housed roaches, mice, and other pests that I’d prefer not to encounter when I take my dog out at night.

To alleviate my guilt, I imagined myself as an anime villain, mowing down everything in my path, laughing evilly as the innocent bugs tried to escape. And that got me writing this poem in my head. I originally thought it was a villanelle. Not sure what it ended up as, but I do like the rhyme scheme, and the evil tone that grows more seductive through the poem is a little chilling, even to me.

Call Me Destructor
By Michelle Garren-Flye

Call me Destructor;
watch me lay waste.
I cannot hear your cry,
but you will not escape.

Luxuries can’t make me poor;
destruction is my only taste.
My use of power I justify;
just watch me lay waste.

I feel the rush in my core…
Victims stuck in my mindscape—
watch them flitter and fly!
I laugh as they try to escape.

Never enough, I always want more.
Your dreams I will reshape—
raze it all, the only way to satisfy
this desire I have to rape.

You want what you know is in store;
your desires were never chaste.
I know this you cannot deny.
Are you sure you desire escape?
Photo and poem copyright 2024 Michelle Garren-Flye.

A Poem for Lamar and Drake

I originally had decided to write a blog post about finally re-watching the entire series of “Lost” because I always felt sure I missed a lot during my first watch of the show during six erratic television seasons. (I really had, too. No doubt, lots of stuff missed during that first viewing.) Then I happened to listen to a podcast about the ongoing war between the two rappers Kendrick Lamar and Drake, found I had an opinion about that, too, and that opinion actually developed into a poem, so, in the realm of Things I Have No Business Commenting On…

Being a fifty-plus-year-old white woman, I don’t really keep up with the hiphop/rap scene much, although I’ve undoubtedly heard some I like. The first I’d heard about the Drake/Lamar feud was a couple weeks ago in a chance remark from a friend. I was interested because Kendrick Lamar had actually achieved something I once wished I could when he won the Pulitzer Prize.

The podcast I listened to was a Washington Post podcast, so fairly unbiased. I’ve read a little more since and talked to a few people. Everyone’s got an opinion, and some people have a less than complimentary view of Drake, influenced, no doubt, by salacious (the news loves that word) rumors and claims about his relationships. As one person said to me with great disdain, “Who’s on team Drake?”

And yet, both rappers have been acting out, putting out music practically in real time over streaming services. It reminds me of old battles that happened in newspapers between politicians or poets like Robert Frost and Carl Sandburg (that’s one of my favorites). Except these “songs” are more than inflammatory disses, they’re downright mean and often libelous, and more than one has been taken down almost as soon as it was put up. Maybe by a manager or someone with some creative control and more common sense?

So, even though I probably don’t have any right to have a real opinion about this rap battle, I was nonetheless moved to write the following poem. As for if I’m on team Lamar or team Drake, I’d just like to say I hate to see anybody wasting their talents dragging apart an art form they both excel at and should spend their time promoting. What good will it do the music world if two bright stars develop a black hole between them?

Beef
By Michelle Garren-Flye

Send out your diss
over the interweb.
Its mark won’t miss
your intended jab.

Insulting pushback,
wasting your time.
Get in the next crack—
make sure to rhyme!

Talent you got in spades
but gotta be sure to rile
when you throw shades!
(What rhymes with pedophile?)

Take it from this old white chick:
you could do so much more.
You could make each word stick,
bring the world to the floor.

But go ahead, send out a slur,
defend what’s left of pride.
Growl and bark like a mad cur,
and we’ll watch from ringside.
This tree has a death sentence. The town has decided it doesn’t look good enough to not be cut down. So it will soon be gone. I’m a little sad. Photo by Michelle Garren-Flye

National Poetry Month: Fortune Cookie Poetry 30: “It’s not the end yet. Let’s stay with it.

hee hee ha ha…ya gotta be kidding me?

If ever I’ve wondered if God had a sense of humor, this was answered today. I honestly howled with laughter when I read today’s fortune. And I swear by all that is holy, that is today’s fortune. I’d just been thinking thank goodness this is the last one when I pulled that fortune out of the cookie. I wish there’d been a camera on me because I honestly felt like somebody was pranking me.

Maybe somebody is. Maybe it’s my balloon-man telling me there’s more to come out of fortune cookies than I know. Maybe even a book?

Whatever. This has been a wonderful month creatively. I’ve written some of my best poetry, and I don’t think I’ve written some of my worst this month, so there’s some creative growth that has occurred. So good. I wrote when I was sick, when I was traveling, when work was busy, when I was finishing up an editing project…I never missed a day during all that.

I do thank you for reading it all. I’ll keep you posted if the fortune cookies decide it’s a good idea to fill up a book. 🙂

Photo and poem copyright 2024 Michelle Garren-Flye
It’s not the end yet. Let’s stay with it.

What a Month
By Michelle Garren-Flye

I’m tired and distracted and ready to go.
I’ve other things to do that take up my time!
Don’t overstay, you’re breaking the flow.

Life goes on may be a tale of woe,
and that’s easy to say when it’s not your dime.
I’m tired and distracted and ready to go

We’ve had a great run, but this I know:
drawing out a good thing would be a crime.
Don’t overstay, you’re breaking the flow.

If needs were less or the pace would slow,
if only I could be forever in my prime!
But I’m tired, distracted, and ready to go.

This month has left us much to show.
It hasn’t been easy, but we made the climb!
Don’t overstay now, you’ll break the flow.

I’m guessing you’d like a little quid pro quo,
and I thank you for reading all my rhythm and rhyme.
Now I’m tired and distracted and ready to go.
Don’t overstay. You’re breaking the flow.

National Poetry Month: Fortune Cookie Poetry 29, “The attitude within is more important than the circumstances without”

What came to mind immediately was Jimmy Buffett’s classic “Changes in Latitudes, Changes in Attitudes”. Love that song and hope to live it someday. However, while I’m still mostly “Mom” the word that is most important to me is “home” and my home is far from perfect. However, I have a lot of pride in what it is, because I think what it has makes up for everything it lacks, at least to the people who belong to it.

Photo and poem copyright 2024 Michelle Garren-Flye
The attitude within is more important than the circumstances without.

Welcome Home
By Michelle Garren-Flye

We may be small, we may be broken,
the kitchen’s not clean, there’s dust
everywhere and the laundry was forgotten—
but what we do have here is a must.

You feel it as soon as you walk in:
a warmth lacking in tidier spaces,
a friendly smell of meals that have been
eaten in peace in this humblest of places.

Maybe it’s love, maybe it’s life lived well—
or just reliably there although you may roam?
It’s much more than just a place you can dwell,
and whatever it is, it makes this a home.

Happy National Poetry Month: Fortune Cookie poetry 26, “Good news will [Be] coming from the office”

At first I was a bit irritated by the typo in today’s fortune. It was the second one I drew, too, because the first was one I’d already done. Not wanting to eat three fortune cookies (I’m superstitious about not eating the cookie or, horrors, throwing away the fortunes), I decided to make the most of this one.

My “office” is my bookstore, which some of you may be familiar with, so this fortune got me thinking about how every time the door opens, there’s the potential for good news to be coming in. And that got me thinking about sitting here at my desk thinking good news was just going to come in and find me without me doing anything at all to attract it or deserve it. So I wrote this little villanelle a little tongue-in-cheek about my low energy days. (They do happen!)

Enjoy. 🙂

Photo and poem copyright 2024 Michelle Garren-Flye
Good news will [be] coming from the office.

Potentiality
By Michelle Garren-Flye

Today I could just wait
for potential to find me
because I know I am great.

The way isn’t always straight
when you long to be free,
but today I should just wait.

Strive each day to create;
yes, on this we agree
because I know I am great.

Fake it till that date,
when all know my pedigree
but til then I shall just wait.

It won’t take long, it’s fate,
and this I can guarantee
because I know I am great.

Perseverance may be key
to arriving at your potentiality,
but today I can just wait
because I know I am great.

National Poetry Month: Fortune Cookie Poetry 24, “Just wait for the right moment. Keep your eyes and ears peeled.”

Yesterday’s poem just sort of came to me. Today’s was more difficult. However, I had so much fun with the concrete poetry form, I decided to try it again. It’s sort of an Earth Day poem (two days late), and it started out a little more lighthearted than it ended up. I’m not super happy with it, but that’s kind of what this month is all about, right? Writing a poem from a fortune cookie prompt in a short amount of time. It may end up as a masterpiece…it may not.

So, take it as it is. I hope you enjoy it a little, anyway.

Photo and poem copyright 2024 Michelle Garren-Flye

National Poetry Month: Fortune Cookie Poetry 23, “Expect great things, and great things will come”

Okay, confession time. Today, for the first time, drew a fortune I just couldn’t work. I tried. I even took the picture. But it wasn’t in the least poetic and it wasn’t even something I could relate to. It was, “Tension in a partnership? It might be time for you to delegate.”

I mean, yes, I’m a business owner, but who am I going to delegate to in my sole proprietorship? My cat? My erstwhile marriage was what really caused me tension, and that’s done. My daughter and I get along. I do delegate to her when I need to, and she always does what I ask. My sons are grown.

So, not being a corporate tycoon and not feeling tension in my other partnerships, I decided to, for the first time, draw another fortune. (I ate both cookies, btw. They were delicious.)

I’m so glad I did. I listened to a podcast just this morning about an Oregon City using its camping ban to fine and jail the homeless population in its parks. I listened to the story of a woman about my age who raised her children in this city who, because of the death of her husband and health problems, had become homeless. She was camping in a park near her old neighborhood.

I often think of the true meaning of “there but for the grace of god” and I know there’s truly a hairs’ breadth that saves us from ill fate. Or maybe it’s an angels’ breath?

God bless and I hope you enjoy this one, my first concrete poem in quite a while.

Photo and poem copyright 2024 Michelle Garren-Flye

National Poetry Month: Fortune Cookie Poetry 22, “Success is a planned event”

Today I decided to try a different kind of sonnet. I’ve always been fond of Shakespearean sonnets, but today I opted for a Petrarchan sonnet. I’m not certain I’ve mastered it, although I do have two to share. The rhyme scheme is easy enough to follow (I used ABBA ABBA CDE CDE in the first one, ABBA ABBA CDC CDC in the second.) It’s the theme that somewhat escapes me.

The first was inspired by the teachers of the field trip I just got back from. Petrarchan sonnets are supposed to express admiration for someone or something. I can think of no one more worthy of admiration than three teachers who are brave enough to take 170-some kids on a three-day field trip in which they bring back three trophies and all the kids they left with. That’s well-planned success!

The second is a little more amorphous thematically. I just went for the “I’m in love and I’ll do anything for you” theme. Still, as is the case most of the time, the second one seems a little better. A little tighter, maybe?

I plan to play with this form more.

Photo and poems copyright 2024 Michelle Garren-Flye
Success is a planned event. 

To the Teachers
By Michelle Garren-Flye

I watch with admiration and joy
as you lay out the problem before us
in a manner that makes me curious
about the method you will employ,
the way you will destroy
what would otherwise cause a fuss
but you dispense with it and thus
success becomes our ploy.

To you I must confess
my admiration grows
as I watch you at work;
I know you’ll make a success
for your inspiration only grows
and duties you do not shirk.


Star Hunting
By Michelle Garren-Flye

I’m out to catch a star
for you to place in your eye.
I’ll be back by and by
though I may travel far.
Does this sound bizarre
and do you wonder why
I can’t just leave things as they are?
It’s all because I love deep
and hold my passion within.
It’s worth a loss of sleep
even if on the way I weep.
If I plan I know I’ll win
and your heart safe I will keep.