Shawn L. Bird

Original poetry, commentary, and fiction. All copyrights reserved.

poem- simmering October 3, 2014

Wake with the head ache.

Set willow bark shavings

simmering on the stove

fifteen minutes to a rich russet hue.

Steep for an hour, salicin leeching.

Sip all day the natural medicine.

Heal the head.

.

.

.

While I am a terrible gardener (I have no patience, and forget to water) I am intrigued with botanical medicines.  In Outlander, the character of Claire is an expert in this area, and author Diana Gabaldon has studied thoroughly to make her books accurate.  One of Claire’s stand-by medicines is willow bark tea, so when I saw willow bark for sale at the local health food store, I had to give it a try.  It’s not bad tasting (just like willow smells, if that makes sense) and it does sooth a head ache, as well as keeping you hydrated.

 

poem- pickled

Filed under: Poetry — Shawn L. Bird @ 12:39 am
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Mrs. Pickle

taught me much about

acidic Southern charm.

Vitriol dripped from her tongue

like garlic scented vinegar

stirred into syrup: bitter honey.

Against her absurdity, laughter made a bulwark.

A champion rose up,

waving a sword of words that

sliced that pickle into tiny pieces.

A memory to relish.

 

poem- wasted day October 2, 2014

On this day

I remember a ghost anniversary,

the day in 1976

when my sister was married.

My 12 year old figure was

encased in my mother’s girdle

beneath a hideous rust bridesmaid gown.

I sported a new Vidal Sasoon bob,

felt bold and grown up with

my uni-brow plucked.

I remember my father’s scowl

when a groomsman with waist length hair

obeying rattling spoons, bent to kiss me,

and the resulting blush.

The marriage lasted four years.

My daughter wore the hideous dress

when she was twelve.

She called herself a princess;

rust suits her.

Too bad my sister

never saw it.

.

.

.

You know, that whole girdle thing is really weird.  I was not a pudgy child by any reckoning.  I probably weighed about 95 lbs around the time of this wedding.  I recall it was my idea, so I must have been self-conscious of a little paunch, which at 12, was not paunch at all.  Very strange how girls are, isn’t it?

.

I looked for the wedding photos in the album, but it looks like I took them out of those photo eating ‘magnetic’ glued albums, and who knows where I put them.  Sorry!

 

 

poem- perfect

Filed under: Poetry — Shawn L. Bird @ 12:44 am
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We are 1-0:

tall and short

quiet and verbose

slender and round

scientific and artistic

Together we are

perfect.

 

poem-lost you October 1, 2014

Filed under: Poetry — Shawn L. Bird @ 6:41 pm
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You were there

I could tell

I could feel you

in the air.

But when I awoke

the sense of you

was lingering

while the rest of you

was lost.

 

 

poem- spinning

Filed under: Poetry — Shawn L. Bird @ 9:04 am
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Head

floating

above my day.

Sickness

beckoning.

 

poem- crush September 30, 2014

Filed under: Poetry — Shawn L. Bird @ 5:47 pm
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Crush

Crush on you

Rocks crushed

Emotionally crushed.

Orange Crush

Crush

.

.

.

Just playing with a word.

 

 

poem- looking (an #Outlander poem) September 29, 2014

“I want to look,”

she says.

Finger outlining

the focus of

her attention,

she walks

a slow, studious circle

of analysis

and inevitable

appreciation.

.

“Fair’s fair,”

he says,

stepping back

with a glint in his eye,

joyfully

thankful for circumstance

that made her

his.

.

.

.

Another poem based on Diana Gabaldon’s Outlander;  this one based on Ron Moore’s TV series, specifically episode 107, “The Wedding.”

 

poem- old journeys

Filed under: Poetry — Shawn L. Bird @ 12:29 am
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First

the steam whistles

disappeared.

Now

the tracks

are gone and

so the old journeys

are memories

and wishes.

 

poem- blur September 28, 2014

Filed under: Poetry — Shawn L. Bird @ 6:12 pm
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Your face

is in soft focus

Love is

myoptic.