June 7, 2021

the sunday muse #163

 



life so far is recital

posture

finger positions

her mind so far, precomposed

                cello lessons

                formal arrangements 

                smile and curtsey

she is young and can’t quite feel strings ring under tender fingertips

pedantic to the process

                silent to the soul

suddenly hits a wrong note

a sour thing (but… it… feels… so… sweet)

another blunder

a deep note, from a deep place

                                                and now she knows for sure

she’s not making mistakes

                                she’s making choices 

she is young and this is her first rebellion

 

presto change-o this is her song now

                                breaking notes chained together crawling like caterpillars

lightning racing up and down the spine arching high exploding butterflies 

joy fills her face spills out her eyes thrills the fingers teasing tangled strings

            presto into the strange-o she tests her range and finds no

                                walls nothing to stop her

nothing to stain her rearrange her she can shape herself into herself

                confess each flaw spirit-rich flesh-raw dialog with god

she tames the beast she brings the boogie everything spinning spinning dizzy

 

she is young, and dizzy is the gift she gives the world, gives herself, that and

                permission 

                to be

 


20 comments:

  1. This really sings, Phillip! I love the idea of her giving herself permission
    to be.

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    1. thank you, yes i like the way it ended too, felt like a powerful kind of thing

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  2. This is stunning! A wonderful read ... cheers.

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  3. I like the presto section racing up and down the spine exploding into butterflies....wonderful image. I'm with Helen....stunning !

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    1. thank you, and yeah, that part was fun to write, glad you liked this

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  4. There is so much in this poem to love. Your ending is so perfect. My 43 year old daughter is still struggling with her permission "to be"

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    1. thank you susie, and i can understand, i still have trouble giving myself permission too sometimes. thanks for commenting, glad you liked

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  5. Wonderful poem of discovery - I particularly like this line 'nothing to stain her rearrange her she can shape herself into herself'.

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    1. thank you marion, so glad you liked this

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  6. This poem is full to the brim with wonder and poetic gifts Phillip! A wonderful coming of age poem. We must be true to the voice within! So glad to see you again at the Muse!

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    1. thank you carrie, i think you have your finger on the pulse of the poem.

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  7. I love how even the line structure and line breaks reflect that transition from girl following all the rules to rebellious teenager. This is so well-crafted!

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    1. line structures are always important in my writing for expressing or organizing ideas, or sound, etc, you have a keen eye, thanks for stopping by again, glad you liked.

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  8. Your lines move, as do fingers on the strings, crescendoing into a joyous celebration of being. Such an uplifting poem!

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    1. thank you indybev, uplifting was my goal, so i'm glad the poem got there for you.

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  9. This captures the mood of youth and change, seen through the lens of experience, yet without bitterness, only joy. I think it also describes well the creative process.I especially like the transition from sour to sweet, from what is given to what is felt. So good to see you writing again. Sorry I missed this last week.

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    1. hey joy, so good to hear from you, and sorry i missed this, ive been on vacation. "I think it also describes well the creative process." spot on.

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  10. What a wonderful poem and manifesto to human choice. She's blessed to have learned so young. Favorite line:
    "nothing to stain her rearrange her she can shape herself into herself"

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    1. thank you jadeli, that was one of my favorites as well

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