Saturday, December 30, 2017


Wabi-sabi
Dec 25 2017






The Japanese have a word
for the beauty to be found
in imperfection;
its artlessness,
its unaffected truth.

Because it's the needy
who bring out our best,
the cracks
that let in the light.
Because symmetry is boring,
and perfection
leaves nothing to chance.

Because if DNA were infallible,
we would still be single-celled creatures
in a warm primordial sea.

And because of all the mistakes
I couldn't help but make
to bother keeping score,
the many more
I will.

The curious object
odd, and flawed, and homely
I circle, and circle again,
compelled to observe
from every angle possible.
The broken, the quirky, the hurting
that draw me in,
the outrageous character
I cannot resist.

Like the stunted tree
that has struggled to grow
in parched depleted soil,
its rings compressed
wood dense
twisted branches bent,
I find myself circling
and circling again.
So much to see
in its imperfection;
the singular beauty
of nature's testing
in every crook, and burr, and break,
each scarred and gnarled limb.



There is the blank slate
of a newborn babe
cooing in its cradle.
While the stories written
in the parchment skin, and haggard face
of the old man on his deathbed
show the worth
of a consequential life.


How suffering, overcome
becomes us.
How transcendence emerges
beneath the glossy surface
we so artfully construct.


Thursday, December 21, 2017


The Black Obsidian Lake
Dec 17 2017


In the middle, the ice was black;
gleaming, like volcanic glass
and dark and dense as ebony.

And in the shallows
transparent as a clerestory window.
So you could look all the way down
to the silty sandy bottom.
To winter fish
in their mammoth aquarium
swimming blithely past.
To every ripple, and sheltering crab,
lost lure, discarded can.
To water-logged timber, a century after the drive,
vintage giants, sunk
in beds of weeds
and blooms of blue-green algae.

All the absences
that must be present
for a lake to freeze this way:
no thaw, or snow
or wind, or flow;
flat settled water
in persistent cold
left deep, and undisturbed.

Scientists explain
how light passes freely
through uniform parallel crystals.
But to the skaters
who glide without resistance
and feel as if gravity didn't exist
         –   hovering above
    crystal-clear layers
    of invisible water and ice   –
the effect is pure wonder
and needs no explanation.

Although leaning in
to each swift sure cut
        –   the rhythmic shhhht - shhhht - shhhht
    of keenly sharpened steel   –
she feels a twinge of guilt,
the immaculate surface dulled
by showers of shaved ice,
the etched white lines
flashing blades inscribe.

It is as if we cannot help
but obliterate beauty
in the act of admiring it.
Contaminate
the purity of nature
by merely being present.

The brilliance
of transparent ice
the black obsidian lake.
Which will only last a few more days;
susceptible
to any change in the weather
the entropy of sun.
But is this not, after all, beauty's intangible essence,
how it is precious ...and transient ...and rare?

And the meaning of beauty, as well;
futile
if it goes unwitnessed
and there are none to mourn its end?



I was moved to write this after reading the following piece in this weekend's Globe:


Black ice and ‘the most Cana­dian day ever’
'The Globe and Mail Metro (Ontario Edition)' - 2017-12-16
CAR­RIE TAIT

Lisa Roddick is wearing a pink toque with a blue pompom. She’s in goal. Her husband, James, wearing a black Leaside Lancers hockey jersey from his high-school days, is coming her way with the puck.

The pair did not come to British Columbia’s Lake Windermere just to play shinny with their pals. They came to see a scientific rarity: black ice.

Right now, skaters near Lake Windermere’s shores can see the bottom as if they were looking through a window. Fish swimming. Clamshells resting in sandy ripples. Makeshift boat anchors connected to rusty chains waiting for next summer.

Farther from shore, where the water is deeper and light cannot penetrate, the ice looks like it is dyed black. The Roddicks and three friends adhere to shinny etiquette, playing far from shore to stay clear of kids and casual skaters in Taynton Bay. The lake’s ice sheet is nearly flawless, smooth on the surface with uniform clarity and colouring below. Frozen water has folks here in Invermere, B.C., on the northern tip of the lake, excited.

Mr. Roddick plays the puck off his skate, back to his stick. He banks a shot off the puffy purple coat serving as a goal post but cannot get the rubber across the imaginary goal line.
“Eat that, husband,” Ms. Roddick says. The boys-against-girls shinny game in the Columbia Valley plays on. The Rocky Mountains line the east side of the lake, the Purcells frame the west.

The Roddick crew came from Golden, about 120 kilometres away, after watching a Facebook friend’s video of himself skating on the see-through ice.

“This is the most Canadian day ever,” Mr. Roddick says as the group drinks Pilsner and grapefruit Palm Bays after the game. “You have a rink that is flooded perfectly and goes forever. No one has to shovel.”

Dozens of skaters glide on this winter anomaly. Some push baby strollers. Gene Matsalla is 77, has lived here for more than 30 years and never seen the ice this clear. “Everything is kind of freaky,” he says. Mr. Matsalla is wearing a trapper’s hat and gets a kick out of how many kids are here rather than in school. “What the heck,” he says. “Mother nature is co-operating.”
Perfect conditions are needed for black ice. No wind. No snow. No moving water. A slow freeze. Lake Windermere is not a prime candidate because it is so large – about 17 kilometres long and a couple of kilometres across. It is technically a wide stretch of the Columbia River.
“It is such a unique situation,” says Brian Moorman, a geography professor who specializes in permafrost and glaciers at the University of Calgary. “To get a really nice clear black ice like that, it is going to take days and days.”

All ice crystals have six sides, grow from the top down, and bond to their neighbours to form a sheet. Black ice forms when the crystals grow perpendicular to the surface and parallel to each other, undisturbed by wind and other factors. These crystals will be the same size and shape, like a new set of dinner candles perfectly packaged and standing on end. When ice crystals grow vertically and bond perfectly, light passes through without distorting.
“That’s why it looks so clear,” Prof. Moorman says. “It is magical.”

He estimates Lake Windermere’s ice crystals would be between a few millimetres and one centimetre wide. The ice is about 13 centimetres thick right now, meaning the crystal columns will be the same length.

Most bodies of water have “white ice” when they freeze. These crystals are smaller and grow in different directions. Perhaps moving water interrupted a crystal’s growth or influenced its direction. Maybe snow mucked up the freezing process. The water probably froze quickly. The crystals still bond together, but because they grew in all directions and are different sizes, uniform columns are impossible. Light cannot get through mishmashed ice crystals. The result: opaque ice.

Gas also messes with perfection, according to Matti Lepparanta, a geophysics professor at the University of Helsinki in Finland. “Gas bubbles accumulate in the ice cover and the more there are bubbles, the more opaque the ice,” the snow and ice expert said. Gas can come from lake water and lake bottoms. Bubbling springs also cause interference.

Calgary is about 275 kilometres from Invermere, which sits between Radium Hot Springs and Fairmont Hot Springs. Lake Windermere is the area’s defining feature.

Geography does not limit black ice. It has formed on Russia’s Lake Baikal, which holds one-fifth of the world’s fresh water. It has taken over parts of the Ottawa River. Calgarians rush to mountain lakes when the phenomenon strikes. This year, black ice formed on Two Jack Lake, Parks Canada says. That lake is about 130 kilometres west of Calgary.

Black ice’s cosmetic characteristics are fleeting. The white streaks skaters leave are instant imperfections. Snow will, inevitably, cover the ice. Melting and refreezing changes its complexion. That’s why folks like Theresa Wood keep ducking out of work to go skating.
“It feels surreal,” she says after returning to work at Taynton Bay Spirits, a distillery near Invermere’s Kinsmen Beach. “It feels like you are skating on nothing.”

She spotted a black pair of sunglasses under the ice the other day. Her son Bryan, who is 5, tracks discoveries, too. “Shells and golf balls and some trash,” he says.

Isaac McLeod is skating for the first time, unaware of his lucky timing. He’s four, his skates are blue and white, and he falls frequently. “That’s one thing I know,” he says.

Meanwhile, the Roddicks and their friends are tabulating the day’s stats: An iPhone app tells them they skated about 17 clicks. They ripped around for three and a half hours. The three girls beat the two boys 4 to 1, maybe. “Okay. We’ll say 5 to 2,” Marcie Trenholm says.


Canis Lupus
Dec 20 2017


The dead wolf
seemed so much smaller
than that beast who howls
beyond the circle of light.

The lifeless form
so unnaturally still.
His muscles slack,
piercing eyes
now sightless slits,
the long limbs
of a distance runner
surprisingly thin
limply splayed-out.
His ribs are clearly visible,
and the thick grey fur
has turned brittle and dull;
not unexpected
in the middle of a winter
when prey is scarce
and the cows fat.

Not a lone wolf
but a pack animal, just like us.
Who will be missed, and even mourned
when he fails to return home.

Who had to be shot,
for protection
a lesson
petty vengeance, perhaps.
Still, no one takes pleasure
in the death of wolf;
who looks so dog-like, lying there in the cold,
heat bleeding out of him
the blood-stained snow.

Meanwhile, the cows steam-up the barn,
the farmer lies down with his wife,
a full moon rises
in cloudless sky.
And you can hear the manic howling
beyond the circle of light.

The golden retriever growls, barks, struts,
peering out the window
on high alert.
The atavistic urge of dogs,
hackles up
at the scruff of her neck, the base of her spine.
And something fierce
in her tightly focused eyes,
a wildness
that even the farmer
would hardly recognize.





This is based on a true story. So the photos are also authentic; not the boilerplate pics I usually download from Google images. (I say “based”, of course, because I've taken a number of poetic and narrative liberties.)

It was hard to look at the body of the dead wolf, an animal that so closely resembles our own beloved dogs. And also an animal with which we ourselves so easily identify: an intelligent apex predator living as a social animal in a tightly-knit group. It's a difficult trade-off, even though one wants to be sympathetic to the farmer: the lives of the fat dull cows over such a charismatic creature; the numbingly domestic over the wild and independent; the plain and pedestrian over this feared beast of myth and legend.

On the other hand, the wolves have been known to brazenly take some local dogs. So I can't help but think that one fewer wolf is one less threat to my own precious pets; who would, of course, be helpless if confronted by a wolf, distant relative or not.

I quite like beyond the circle of light (which, a careful reader will notice, is repeated, and so acts as a kind of recurrent leitmotif). There was so much I could have gone on about in order to contrast the sense of threat of the dark foreboding wilderness with the familiar and tame and civilized. But these five words, by implication, do it all. I think they convey with elegant compression and simplicity the image of us huddled within out small circle of light, besieged all around by encroaching and unknowable dangers – both the real and the imagined. And simply referring to the howling sound of a wolf pack barking at the moon immediately elicits the thrill and and threat; no need to actually describe either its quality or our visceral response. This is a good example of two cardinal rules of poetry I find myself repeatedly falling back on. First: show, don't say. And second: trust the reader; let the reader be rewarded by doing some of the work herself.

I chose golden retriever because I think this breed offers a great contrast with her feral relative: a trusting, gentle, attentive animal bred to a very human aesthetic of beauty, from her luxurious coat to her long raised tail and floppy ears. But, of course, within her genetics lies a seed of wildness and wolfishness: a good note for the poem to end on. 



Saturday, December 9, 2017


Yard Work
Dec 12 2017


There is always yard work
that needs to be done.

In a world of trouble
and fraught browbeaten lives
a few hours of keeping your head down
and your hands in moist sun-warmed soil
kneeling over the hydrangeas
or repelling an invasion of slugs
is all you could really ask for.

A simple chore, a certain end;
something you can see, touch, measure.
The virtue
of honest work,
the satisfaction
of muscle, sweat, dirt.
Of standing, hands on hips
and surveying your small sovereign domain,
all squared away
under control.

Yes, you are hopelessly bourgeois,
a pathetic example
of conventional suburban man
with your postage stamp yard
and shed of neatly stacked implements.

Depending on the season
shovelling, raking, pruning, planting
and always cutting the grass, it seems;
whatever needs doing,
no matter what's in the news
the politicians are up to
the doomsday clock tolls.

A modest home, metaphorical castle,
with the drawbridge up,
your loving companion
in a lofty tower,
vats
along the battlements
filled with burning oil.

Friday, December 8, 2017


Peripheral Vision
Dec 6 2017


It scurries along the baseboard,
as if lost in a maze
and feeling its way out.

I don't so much see the mouse, as sense it;
the distant rim of my retina
on continuous high-alert.
While my conscious mind
is distracted by the obvious;
the direct line of sight
spot-lit,
like jangling keys
before a giggling grasping infant.

So I wonder how much of the world
I've been missing.
Even more, how much of myself.
Of my body,
performing all its complex tasks
with such marvellous skill
unseen, unheard,
as if I were merely a passenger
along for the ride.
And even more, of my mind,
flattering itself I'm in control
when most of my brain does perfectly well,
unencumbered
by awareness
memory
sense of self.

A brief thaw
in a merciless winter
and the mice find their way in.
A new arrival, I think
as he pauses, eyes darting, looking completely lost,
then bolts, start/stop, across the living room floor
into open danger.

I can read his confusion, and fear.
His desperation
for a small dark place
the smell of kin
the calming touch of fur;
a cozy nest
hidden behind the sheet-rock.
Where a mother is grooming her pups;
tiny hearts fluttering,
pink
          ...and warm
                                 ...and sightless.



I experience a real sense of violation when I find mice inside. But I'm getting used to it. Even though they threaten the comforting division between in, and out; between the predictably domestic, and the contingently wild. My house no longer feels like my impregnable castle.

I'm impressed by how infallible my peripheral vision is. How I don't see, but experience the same absolute certainty of sight. I'm almost thrilled by the survival skill of both my unconscious mind and my primitive faculties.

I think the poem does three things.

It recalls a true experience.

It flirts with a philosophical discourse on the nature of consciousness. I say “flirts”, because anything more would be better suited to essay than poem.

And it alludes to the commonality of all living things – reading his state of mind as automatically as I read his furtive movement. And among all living things, mostly mammals. And especially those to whom we're closely related; which, unlikely as it seems, very much includes mice.


Happy Feet
Dec 4 2017


Stiff, used sweat socks
tossed upon the floor.

Hand-knit wool
soft, and fleece, and warm.

Supple cotton slippers, that seamlessly conform
to cold callused feet
pleading for relief.
So it's through the door
and oxfords, brogues, and mary-janes
are instantly kicked-off,
cool athletic high-tops
chucked, or doffed, or dropped.
Along with heels, slip-ons, winter togs
chukkas, derbies, clogs,
patent leather, all-weather
made-to-measure
lost.
Galoshes, gumboots, steel-toes
and orthopaedic walkers,
the posh, and hip, and stylish
tacky, frumpish, awkward.

Tube sock, formal sock
shrunken, stretched, and torn,
new sock, used sock
hand-me-down and worn.
Ankle sock, knee sock, single size fits all,
darned sock, orphaned sock
on the door-knob in the hall.

Happy feet, and toasty toes
and nicely padded bottoms,
whimsical creations
with Santa Clauses on 'em.

The gift of socks
you hated as a kid,
but all a man could want
who has acquired the wisdom
of cold feet
and warm hearts
and hefty thermal socks.
Who is comfortable
in his own skin;
kicking-off his shoes,
and slipping-in
to thick cozy softness.

Sunday, December 3, 2017


Ice Fog
Dec 2 2017


Ice fog, as evening descends,
turning the sky
a grey gauzy wash.
Water condensing, as the air cools,
and the full moon, a pale disc
in its softly lit corona.

I walk surrounded;
a dome of lunar light
enclosing me,
while the rest of the world
is lost to sight.

White snow, like a cat's retina
still brightly reflecting
despite the fog;
while the shadows are softly smudged,
a chiaroscuro painting
giving depth to the path.

I move through this space
of gentle contrast, watery shadow
with no need of artificial light.
The moon is enough,
nature provides.

Tonight, no stars.
Even the earth
has contracted around me;
an enchanted glow
like a winter cloak
I gather tight to my chest.