Week 2
Prompt: WHEN I WAS LITTLE
Paint Chips:
genie lamp
quarry
full moon
champagne
aquarium
Scroll down to enjoy this week’s poems from some of my poetry partners!
We had some fun weaving childhood memories into our poems this week – and maybe a bit of looking back with both wistfulness and wisdom?
When I Was Little
by Patricia J. Franz
captive or captivated
champagne bubbles,
a full moon’s surrender,
the slow-motion float
of a clownfish
aswim
in my aquarium;
captive or captivated
a quarry’s ore, ransomed
wishes living in a genie lamp
when I was little
life was black or white
now light and dark gives way,
a world awash in beige
thank god for blue
sky, ocean, lake, you
the color in my world.
Come! You summon me:
Set free the genie!
Release the sea!
Heal this damaged earth!
Seek the promise of a full moon dance
and champagne giggles!
©draft 2022
When I Was Little
Tens of thousands of days
evaporate. Now and then, in
pursuit of a bygone quarry, I
wistfully wish for youth.
Send the universe a few
nostalgic howls. Full moon’s
mercy spills. A champagne
sea fills this aquarium of
memory. Joy swims within.
How we played! Sweet
grass, handstands, easy for
our bodies. Bookmark that
moment lovingly. No need
to rub a genie lamp. My
reward is in the knowing.
April 5, 2022
Kathy Pon
When I Was Little
Hop the fence out back,
Rock and bat,
toss, Wooooosh
look, WHACK!
That sound, ah, that’s it
My crystal quarry
tick,
SMACK
CRAAACK, inside sparkles
Desert genie lamp
Full moon reservoir
Skip,
skip,
ploop, champagne bubbles
Wrinkle the stillness
Of Nature’s Aquarium.
Scott Franz | 8 Apr 2022
When I Was Little
We follow gravel trails through a thinning ponderosa forest.
Limestone boulders, eroded white as the full moon, and piles of fallen pinecones act as honor guards along our path.
There is anticipation, the familiar excitement of exploration bubbling up like champagne.
Abruptly, the forest falls behind and we stand atop the Southern Rim. I can’t comprehend the view. My mind tries to convince my eyes that it’s a canvas, a mural, a hyperbolic facsimile of what truly cannot be.
What god reached down and scooped clear this quarry? What drunken giants painted the jagged and broken lines across its face?
And,
I felt,
small.
In the entirety of the eighteen years I’d trekked across this Earth, I’d been at its center.
But confronted with a Grand Canyon’s grand depth and grand heights across a grand distance—the scales shifted.
I was, unprepared,
like a fish shown the ocean as it’s thrown from the aquarium.
Trapped,
freed from a genie’s lamp, but tethered to another’s will.
Paralyzed,
as the world rose up around me.
And tiny,
Just another pebble on the canyon’s edge.
The world didn’t get bigger,
the universe didn’t shrink.
Nothing changed
but my perspective.
N. Schlegel 4/8/2022