Shawn L. Bird

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

poem- tribal longings May 3, 2014

I miss my tribe.

The house is full of pessimistic

scientific thinkers.

I can’t coax them into poetry.

“I just can’t appreciate it,” says one.

“Poetry.  Yeah.  Whatever,” says the other.

They analyze and ruminate with

cold logic.

They don’t hear the wind’s song,

or feel the blackbird’s call.

I am a lone poet boat tossing

on their scientific sea.

But soon, my tribe will come.

I will be immersed in the language

of verse, pressed into prose.

I will know the companionship

of a crowd of like minds,

feeding on the energy to

fuel our words,

until we come together

again.

.

.

Just 2 weeks until Word on the Lake Writers’ Festival here in Salmon Arm, BC

I’m looking forward to learning from Diana Gabaldon, C. C. Humphreys, Gary Geddes, Ursula Maxwell-Lewis, Carmen Aguerra, Carolyn Swayze, Howard White, and more!  It’s always a fantastic weekend for a bargain price.  You should come.  Seriously.

 

 

poem- duck! May 2, 2014

Filed under: Poetry — Shawn L. Bird @ 11:50 am
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The men blaze the trail

boldly go forward

willing to risk

to achieve the destination.

And so today

mallard male zips across the highway

boldly flapping, barely

missing the VW missile

travelling 100 km/hr.

Not so fortunate his lady friend

flapping five feet behind.

Ladies

sometimes it is unwise

to blindly follow your mate.

 

poem- inheritance May 1, 2014

Filed under: Poetry — Shawn L. Bird @ 6:52 pm
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My son,

I gave you my nose:

a perky nose, not vaguely classic.

I gave you my hair:

the colour, the texture, the volume

so you should keep it

(be nice to your poor balding father,

don’t rub that in).

I gave you my height

(sorry about that).

I gave you my obsessive nature:

all into the current interest

for as long as the interest lasts.

I gave you my shoe lust

and an appreciation for the unique.

I’m not sure where you got that charm

that drags the ladies to you,

or the way you stretch your dimes

or your athletic discipline.

It’s fun to see your inheritance

blinking back at me from those

lovely, hazel eyes.

.

.

P1020020

Mother and son on Mont Juic in Barcelona

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

haiku- flying words

Filed under: Poetry — Shawn L. Bird @ 9:56 am
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The words have been

manipulated, twisted, and set.

Now they fly.

.

.

.

Sent off a collection of 4 poems this week for the CBC Literary Awards, squeezing under the wire at the last minute.  It’s a huge national competition, and I don’t have any expectation, but nothing ventured, nothing gained!   The pieces must never have been published or performed, so they’re a secret.  That was the hardest thing: having to write daily for the blog, and compose something distinct for the contest.  It’ll be months before  winners are announced, so don’t hold your breath.  I’m not! 😉  (But feel free to send some positive vibes my way!)

 

poem- the stroll April 30, 2014

Filed under: Poetry — Shawn L. Bird @ 12:33 am
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Like two hookers

in black vinyl trench coats

the crows stroll between the yellow lines

each watching the traffic

with one jaundiced eye.

 

poem- angel April 29, 2014

Filed under: Poetry — Shawn L. Bird @ 2:42 pm
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She stepped from

behind the mystery

enveloped our

complicated history

Buried us in

the depths of her mercy

unravelled the strings

of our worry,

spun us in from

exile at the periphery,

and celebrated our

joyful new liberty.

 

 

 

poem- unfolding April 28, 2014

Filed under: Poetry — Shawn L. Bird @ 3:05 pm
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The birch trees

are splattered with new green.

Buds like pretty envelopes, unfold

 to reveal letters greeting

summer.

 

micropoetry- joy April 27, 2014

Filed under: Poetry — Shawn L. Bird @ 7:23 pm
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Naked girl

giggling down the road

Babysitter chasing

with the bath towel.

Toddler joyfully

on the run.

.

.

.

I can still hear the giggles in memory, though the toddler in question is now 33 years old.  🙂

 

poem- love story

Filed under: Poetry — Shawn L. Bird @ 12:20 am
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He says

her laughing smile

captivated him.

The smartest girl in the school

he thought, as he sat silently

at the back of the class.

Too good for him.

The only girl who listens

to that crap classical music

that you like, they told him.

So he braved to venture a date,

but she turned him down

in favour of dorm pork chops

He was determined,

and Mozart entertained

Before she knew what had happened

she had a ring on her finger,

and a lifetime

of devotion promised.

Her laughing smile is

not quite as captivating,

she’s unlikely to be

the most intelligent

in the room,

time brings rationalization,

after all

she says he’s too good for her

with laughing eyes

that are still his.

 

snippet of #8 April 26, 2014

Filed under: Poetry — Shawn L. Bird @ 8:23 pm

This is from a novella called Number Eight.  It’s the chapter my students read that I refer to in the poem posted just before.  Kieran is 16.  He’s narrating.

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The air conditioning on Dad’s truck wasn’t working, and it was hot out.  We were both sweltering on the drive home.

“Let’s go in here,” Dad said, pulling into the nearly empty parking lot of a sports bar.

“I can’t go in there.  I’m under age.”

“Nah.  It’ll be fine.  Jed runs this place.”

Jed was one Dad’s old friends.  He was a one legged, ex-con with three ex-wives.  Dad always seemed to know what bar he was tending.  Twice when I was a kid Dad had left me out in the parking lot while he went inside to ‘have a talk with Jed.’  Once I’d waited two hours.  Once it was four.  That time, Sara was in her car seat.  It had been cold, and I’d had to dig a filthy, tattered, stinking dog blanket out of the trunk to drape over us.  We’d huddled together, watching the clouds our breath made until we fell asleep.  A social worker had woken us up hammering on the window.

Dad moved out after that.

We sat in a corner booth in the nearly empty bar.  Jed limped over and slapped Dad on the back in greeting.  “About time you came to see me!”

“A pitcher of your best on tap,” Dad announced, grinning, “for this fine young man and me.”

Jed didn’t even ask for my ID.  He just headed back to the bar, grabbed a pitcher, and set it under the tap.  “So how’s life in Fort Mac?” he asked Dad.

“Profitable.  You should head up there.  You’d make a fortune.”

Jed laughed.  “I like my climate milder.”  He set the pitcher on the table, and put mats and mugs beside it.

“You’re getting soft,” said Dad, reaching for the pitcher and pouring us each a mug.

“I’m tired of rough life.  I’ve got a comfortable girl, a comfortable job, and a comfortable house.  You should try it.”

Dad laughed.  They started to reminisce about their youthful adventures which seemed mostly about drinking, driving too fast, and other times they should have died, but didn’t.

I tuned them out.  I inhaled the beer.   It was sweet and pungent.  I sipped cautiously.  It was cold and golden.  I tilted the mug and drained it.

Dad grinned as he talked to Jed, and re-filled it.

I stared at the mug, then turned my attention to the football game playing on the big screen.  I drank and watched.  I imagined riding a turbo dirt bike through the hills, far from my troubles.  I watched the players running like ants across a striped green sock.

The mug never seemed to empty.  Three more pitchers were delivered to the table.

Dad played pool with a couple of guys who challenged him.  There was laughter, groaning, and shouting.

I watched the football game as the players wove their way unsteadily across the field.  When they were tackled, I closed my eyes.  It hurt.

Eventually, as the quarterback fell to the ground, I groaned, and tipped onto over with him into blackness.

When I came to, it was to find Jed and Dad tugging me to stand.  I staggered out to the truck.

A hammering woke me up.  My eyes were glued together.  I forced them apart, and squinted from the white hot glare they revealed.  I shut them again.  It was so hot, that it was like being in a beer steam bath.

“You’re drunk,” Sara announced.

“I never get drunk,” I muttered.  My voice echoed painfully in my head.

“Then why are you sleeping in Dad’s truck, stinking like a brewery at seven in the morning?”

I swallowed.  My tongue felt hairy.

She hit the button and unlocked my door.  The click sounded like a grenade going off under my ear.  I groaned.

“Come on, stinko.  Let’s get you into a shower.”

“You can’t lift me.  You’re pregnant.”

“Yeah, well, then I guess you’d better walk yourself, hadn’t you?  Come on.”  She pulled my arm and I squinted through the narrowest slits I could make and still see something. I unfolded my legs and slid them onto the ground.  I waved back and forth like a flag pole in a hurricane.

Sara giggled.  “I’ve never seen you drunk.”

“I’m not drunk.  I don’t drink.  Remember?”  I squinted down at her.  “You’d better not drink, either.  It’s not good for babies.”  I stretched out to put a hand on her belly.  It seemed like I reached for miles until I found it.  “You’ll turn its brain to lace if you drink.   I’ve seen pictures.  Don’t drink!”

“I am not drinking, Kieran.  You did.  Get inside before you ruin your reputation as the sober, responsible kid.”  She smirked at me, and tugged harder.

I took one unsteady step and then another, guided by her firm arm on my elbow.  “There you go.  Good job!” she said.   She pushed me into the bathroom, and shut the door.  “I’ll call the dairy and tell them you’re too sick to come to work today,” she said.  She sounded just like Mom.

I stared at the water in the toilet, and suddenly I was desperate to pee.  I reached down to undo my fly, but I couldn’t make the zipper work.  My fingers couldn’t find the pull tab.  I fumbled, cursing my fingers, the zipper, and my dad.  Then I pissed myself.

I stared at the yellow puddle underneath me.  I folded onto the floor, tears dripping off my chin, piss burning my leg.  Disgust rose in my throat.  My mouth not having a pull tab, I stuck my head in the toilet, and vomited my self-revulsion.  I was my father all over again.