March 28, 2026

I Am Not Familiar With Sunshine

 2017/2026 (Tarot, the Sun Reversed).


I am not familiar with sunshine.

My mother is a rain cloud

and my father is gauze

saturated with chloroform and mud.

 

My energy diffuses,

dulling itself—

like pitted silver a century old.

 

But that was long ago.

 

Why do I forget

the horses we rode out on—

manes unbound,

no matter how many flowers we braided in.

 

All those voices

insisting

we were bright.

 

Still, I remember

the heat warms us,

the lawns brown

and the dirt cracks.


Tarot Judgement

 

That moment I faced myself—

unvarnished,

tempted to shut my eyes,

to stare at my feet—

 

that moment startled

like a small blue bird

in the wrong season.

 

Who have I ever been,

but slightly outside

my own knowing?

 

And still—

something in it lifts:

 

not only the record

of my failures,

but what I have survived.

 

A reckoning,

without mercy,

without disguise.

 

I reach for blue—

blue crystals, aqua quartz—

something to hold

while I learn

to look.

March 27, 2026

The Vow

 2015, revised 2026. (c) 


When I told him

that our intercourse needed to be

more “vagina-focused”

he became implacable—

a scolded child.

 

I felt his feet dig in,

his muscles tense for flight.

 

By the time I was ready

to bed him again

he announced he had taken a vow

of celibacy.

 

He said he found no pleasure in it.

The act was empty.

I was empty.

 

My desire, he said

implied possession—

something he now meant to avoid.

 

Jesus, I thought.

The lengths some men will go

to avoid satisfying a woman.


Ace of Pentacles

 

Today—coins, comfort, a garden.

 

She sits on an ornate bench

by the koi pond

bread in hand—

sourdough ripped apart,

moose milk cheese.

She eats it slowly,

as if it might run out.

 

Today she wears mulberry silk.

Once, her mother

made her clothes

from flour sacks and sheets.

 

When she goes quiet,

her assistant stands still,

waiting to be told.

 

The King of Cups

The King of Cups
is sometimes uneasy
with his responsibility.

He serves as pastor,
keeps a shop,
writes poems
no one asks for.

He aches at every infidelity—
small thefts,
insults like papercuts,
teeth knocked loose
in bar fights.

He speaks of forgiveness
as if it were a practice.

He offers his hand
too quickly.

And I don’t know why,
but I distrust him

Page of Pentacles, #2

 3/26/2026


The Page of Pentacles
considers taxidermy—

 

setting wire forms
into receptive postures,
glass eyes
refracting back
the viewer’s gaze.

 

She studies anatomy and art—
what expresses
and what sells.

Page of Pentacles

3/27/2026 (c)  


The page of Pentacles

picks up a spool of thread,

a skein of yarn.

She slams a slab of clay

on the wheel.

 

On weekends,

she keeps the books

for an aging neighbor.

 

Whatever her work,

she completes it.

 

Her casual reading this morning—

a chemistry book.

The spinach in the omelet—

from her own garden.

 

If something needs doing,

she begins,

and does not leave it half-made.