all poems and photographs
© by Maya Stein

all poems and photographs
© by Maya Stein
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Monday, July 31, 2006

instructions against war


























put down your flaming, burnished spear
unmask your vicious threats
reveal your white-hot rage for fear
cast off your harsh regrets

pry open all the locked-up doors
behind which hatred cries
dig up the shame under your floors
make naked all your lies.

lay bare the demon in your dread
lay waste of all your fury
don't wait 'til all of us are dead
we're in that much a hurry.

evict each dirty, shadowed greed
put out each fiery ember
strip off the terror in your need
and let us both surrender.

Monday, July 24, 2006

wisdom from the father


























"I imagine that a big part of your aching comes from hearing MANY voices inside: do this, do that; be true to yourself, be flexible; look at the larger picture, add up the details; don't compromise your independence, don't undervalue your connectedness; step back, step forward; push, relax; hold your breath, breathe....

Whatever the voices say, it's not about an incapacity to love...it's more about mechanics - negotiating differences to avoid unnecessary conflict, and negotiating conflicts so as not to exacerbate differences...what you are creating - and searching for at the same time - is worth the struggle, no matter the outcome. Happiness, I'm convinced, is ultimately a product of bravery."

Wednesday, July 19, 2006

how do i move


















the summer's slowing me down,
and it's alright, because sometimes i need that,
a downshift in speed and expectation, and it's great,
it is, to be this languid, to not need to finish on time,
or hurry before the store's closed, or kowtow
to those false and hastened clocks i'm trying to beat.

and yet, in this heat i feel boneless, a liquid
version of myself, even when my back
arches at the news, the growing urgency
of melting glaciers, false numbers, civilian warfare,
rising waters and record-breaking droughts,
and the rest and the rest and the rest of it.

it's not that i don't care.
it's not that i'm incapable.
it's not that i'm busy.

the question is: how do i move
toward the larger task of coercing the world's survival?

Tuesday, July 18, 2006

getting out of the way


























"We sit down before [a work of art] in order to have something done to us, not that we may do things with it. The first demand any work of art makes upon us is surrender. Look. Listen. Receive. Get yourself out of the way."
--C.S. Lewis

Monday, July 10, 2006

perspective


















Losing track of all your time or
losing sight of all your mess -
even losing steam and speed
can pave the way toward happiness

Suddenly, in place of plans,
you're rolling in a field of green,
not knowing where you're heading to,
forgetting every place you've been.

You let your tightened jaw go slack,
you let your body bounce along.
You never think of going back -
your pant becomes a note, then song.

And through the thicket you embark,
the feet unmindful of the day.
And thus, traversing in the dark,
you're happy to have lost your way.

Friday, July 07, 2006

waiting for the yes


















While I was watching for the mail truck to deliver
the good news about my recent poetry submission
to the well-known literary review in the Midwest,
I neglected to take advantage of the weather
to go for swim in the town pool,
which is lovely, really, all those families,
the jublinant twittering of children on vacation,
the popsicles on sale, the smell of suntan lotion,
the high dive, the reckless splashings of Marco Polo,
the sunlight on skin, the langorous readers poolside,
the July romancers, the boys racing the boys to the deep end,
the girls coy and testy, then forgiving as liquid,
the lifeguard prowess, the rule-bending, the promise
of a movie later, of a friend over, pizza, midnight bedtimes.

While I was sitting on my haunches, listening like a dog
into the air for the sound of the mail truck,
while I was sniffing the sky and waiting for the yes,
the yes was happening all around me,
full glorious unapologetic color,
small births everywhere, electricity and daring,
the slide of noon into three o'clock into 4,
and then something of the sun peeling back,
edging away from itself, something gentle unfolding
and giving the swimmers permission to lay out,
faces slack and happy,
and take in what was left of the day's heat.

I wasn't there, of course, but now,
now that the mail's gone and all I've got
is a handful of drugstore circulars,
a Crate and Barrel catalog and
a small, too-thin return envelope,
I wish I hadn't been so patient,
and I wish I wasn't so specific with what I wanted,
and I wish the pool was open past 5,
and I wish I had more baskets for my eggs,
and I wish and I wish and I wish.

It is almost this pointless to wait,
linger over the what if,
deliberate the opening and closing
of the mailbox door as if life itself
were waiting there, poised to bloom.
Look outside, I tell myself.
That's where blooming happens.

Monday, July 03, 2006

haircut haiku


























you want something gone,
some weight unshouldered? don't think.
lift scissors, then snip.