Saturday, August 27, 2022

A Poem a Day, Week 34, Aug 20-26

A Poem a Day, Week 34, August 20-26, 2022

Welcome to Sifting the Rubble's weekly blog and podcast of my poem-a-day challenge for 2022. I am your host, and poet, Emily Gibson. The poems for the 34th week of the year, August 20 to 26, were inspired by the natural world of central Oregon, my healing work, and a whirlwind adventure of a trip to Santa Barbara to see my partner Jay's daughter at UCSB. 

I will mention that these are 1 or 2 day poems, which have not gone through the grist of revision. That comes later, something I truly look forward to doing. For now, they are freshly hatched, still a little wet around the ears, maybe a bit wobbly in the knees. Yet each has something to say, so I share them, uncensored, as part of my challenge.

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And now, for this week's poems!


Poem #232, Webs of Life

by Emily Gibson, Aug 20, 2022


We lived in a cobweb,

a crowded place filled with 

carcasses from the past 

and detritus of the present.

At times it transformed into

an orb web strung with dew, 

shot through with lines of delight.

Those times shocked our lives

with brilliance.  Remembered, they

sparkle, settle my heart,

and fill my head with wonder.

These sandy memories

are all I allowed myself.

Survival in that web of dark

took strength and skills.

We crafted tools of protection:

honed sharp, lined with barbs,

they stuck to our own skin, 

long past expiration dates.

From this tangled chaos,

on the cusp of maturity,

we emerged, blinked in the sun

and found our individual ways.

Each of us mined that cobweb

for silver and gold--

enough to weight a suitcase

heavy with treasure.

Unnoticed, shards shimmied

into nooks and crannies of luggage,

hidden, ready to puncture our balloons

as we rose above and traveled

on our silks in search of homes.

We separately refused to look at what was,

it felt like betrayal--

we knew what our spider mother

wove from her past,

the sacrifice, her effort to shield us

from her family strands

stretched back multiple generations.

Gratitude could not share space,

left no place for our hurt or confusion.

Time passed, taught that we 

had to see it,

had to go back

and save ourselves

from the corners where we crouched,

ears covered to block out 

noise and fear.

So now we walk

similar paths of discovery,

weaving new webs.

We unpack our suitcases completely,

shake out the shards,

say goodbye to the voices inside

that kept us hidden.

Accept the good,

name the bad,

feel free to love what was

and now is.

Growth is not inevitable, 

but it sure looks good on you.


About "Webs of Life": After a recent visit with my brother, I wrote this poem about two siblings and their separate paths to dealing with childhood trauma. Though it is a very personal poem, when I shared it, I found that people related it to whatever struggles they were working on, whatever growth they were experiencing. They felt I was talking to them. Something about the "you" in use here, perhaps. Either way, I am very fond of this poem because it captures the goal of recovery work: to name what happened without blame.

Poem #233, Dry Ice Dust 

by Emily Gibson, Aug 21, 2022


Yesterday, my horse’s hooves brushed the sand

at a just-right height, when the temperature 


was just so, and the wind hovered like a 

hummingbird, to create a dry ice dust.


It floated for a moment, hugged the curves 

of the ground like fog, before grainy parts 


fell, too heavy, and the rest settled, light.

Then his next step sent dust aloft again. 


About "Dry Ice Dust": This poem captures a moment in the sun with my horse. It is a simple image, conveyed by couplets in 10-syllable lines

Poem #234, What Egg?

by Emily Gibson, Aug 22, 2022


What wise avian parent disposed this shell

in a location far removed from hatchling's peeps,

to distract predators predisposed to

oviparous delicacies?

Though not the shocking blue

of robin eggs or the tiny fragment

of half a hummingbird egg

I sought on childhood walks,

this shell, today, delights

my senses just as much.





Eggshell found on ground.



















About "What Egg?": This poem is simply a narration of my thoughts upon finding this shell. I wasn't sure if it was left by a predator after eating the insides, or if it was dropped by a parent to distract predators. During composition, I chose the latter.



Poem #235, Ponderosa Benthamiana 

by Emily Gibson, Aug 23, 2022


On this day, your needles stood out

though my eyes know you well,

of that there is no doubt.

The shape of your tufts delight,

how your needles sprout

evenly from each central whorl,

like a mechanically spaced cloud.

From below, in your shadow,

your branches darkly crowd,

to capture sun’s light for growth.

At tuft’s end, rays find a route,

light up each needle’s tip,

then reach my forest hangout, 

in green-tinted sunbeams.




Ponderosa branches, seen from below, at Lake Siskiyou.


















About "Ponderosa Benthamiana": As this poem describes, I have looked at, and overlooked, Ponderosas many times. This time was different. The beauty of the needles against the blue! I sought to put those differences into words. The first lines of the couplets rhyme, or near rhyme, but I did not use a syllable count for lines.


Poem #236, Satellite  

by Emily Gibson, Aug 24, 2022


I landed in your orbit,

a satellite of little influence.

I sought to do no harm,

to be a positive element

in your periodic table,

reflecting back to you

your beauty and confidence.

It is a privilege to watch

your navigation of life.

From my vantage point,

out here, a star afar, 

you are totally rocking it.


About "Satellite": We took a trip to Santa Barbara this week to see Jay's daughter at college, our last real window of opportunity before her graduation in June, given all of our schedules. I was inspired to write this poem during this trip. This is another poem that had specific people in mind, but when I shared it, people saw themselves in the words and ideas. Again, I think it is the "you" that allows that to happen. A happy accident!

Poem #237, Tumbleweeds of the Seas 

by Emily Gibson, Aug 25, 2022


Along the shore they lie motionless,

the sea’s winds powerless 

to budge them any bit.

Once scattered by waves, 

now immobilized by tide’s turn, 

like tumbleweeds on a desert 

floor after the wind quiets.

Weighted with sand, shells, 

rocks, strands of seaweed,

plankton’s abandoned egg sacs, 

and an abundance of exoskeletons,

they await the moon’s tug,

to move freely, again.






Beach below UCSB, Goleta, CA.




















About "Tumbleweeds of the Seas": As soon as I saw these root balls of kelp, I thought about the tumbleweeds in central Oregon and wanted to write this poem, playing on the similarities of water and wind.



Poem #238, Emotional Sobriety 

by Emily Gibson, Aug 26, 2022


Thought I was so much better

since I eschewed intoxicants.

From an early age I abstained

substances eaten, smoked, and 

ingested from outside.

When offered, whether legal or not,

No, I said, with firm resolution.

I don’t want to lose reality, 

I don’t like to lose control.  

I don’t need to hide from life.  

Smug satisfaction.

The joke was on me, I guess. 

Pain is pain.   

My reality? Illusion.

My control? Ephemeral.

Yes, I hid from my life light,

lost to my inner drug store’s

intoxicants of fear, over-commitment, 

showing up late, procrastination, 

shame, self-criticism...  

Under the influence, 

on the inside,

ensured my isolation.

It is time to sober up.  


About "Emotional Sobriety": In my reading this week, I came across a passage about emotional sobriety. I felt like a bright light shone on me and I could not hide from the truth. Which meant I needed to write a poem to process and capture that truth!

And that concludes Sifting the Rubble's poetry for this week! I hope you enjoyed this collection of poems. Perhaps some of them spoke to you, or maybe you found one begging to be shared with someone else. If so, I hope you will pass it on! Either way, thank you for listening and reading. Hope to see you next week!

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