Monday, March 25, 2019
Saturday, March 16, 2019
Tough Love
Tough Love
It’s before 7 on a Saturday morning, someone is stirring
No doubt, it’s my thirteen-year old
I’m ready to pounce
I’m ready to rip that screen right out of his hands
I manage to pause, surprising myself
There is no computer, no IPad, not a Kindle Fire in sight
Only a scrap of construction paper folded up like a house
with a peaking window holding up a 10-dollar bill
for his bro, Finn turns 10 today
He writes, “Poophole, happy birthday”
Later, he says “You know what?
“I used so much glue on my card for Finn,
and I told him I sneezed in it.”
Shards
Shards
When you left me,
You barely said goodbye.
It wasn’t right,
I had nowhere to run.
I held up my hands but you were already gone.
To find you again -
I have been running and running
For you,
For you,
For you,
To feel your beauty around me.
It could not be
I know, I know
It had to be.
You needed to be free
And, so did we.
Friday, March 15, 2019
7th Graders Take on Climate Change
7th graders Design
Experiments to Construct Meaning about Climate Change
7th graders did an initial experiment to test:
what is the affect of a “greenhouse” on temperature? They used a mason jar
testing temperature inside and outside the jar. Next, they brainstormed their own
investigable questions about climate change, planned and conducted an
experiment. Today, they walked out of the school to protest climate change –
but before they walked out, they worked together on whiteboards to construct
meaning for their experiments. Here are their whiteboards. What is next?
Students will do a gallery walk and write critiques for each other. What are
things they agree on? What are new questions they have generated together? What
are suggestions for their future studies?
Sunday, March 10, 2019
Supposed to be here
Supposed to
be here
Native bird patrolling my front yard,
Our town steward -
Nonchalantly there,
without any care
Holding steadfast to this ground,
Once covered in a great big mound
Congenial turkey;
Quintessential Berkeley
Today without your fleet
Directing traffic in the street,
Stopping cars with your spurred feet
On your Sunday beat
If we have to go to Mars,
we’ll need you there for stopping wars;
To teach us how to care,
open arms and wings to share
How do you let little things go by?
Neck stretched way up high
Nerf bullets blast into sky
Unperturbed by little boys
Urban dissonance and its toys
Conflicting hopes,
insensitive joys
Bird in a cage,
our sage,
in an age,
so full of rage
Help us heal,
And, be still
So we can then,
begin to feel.
Saturday, March 02, 2019
Spotting
Spotting
I have been waiting for so long;
to see you again.
Its been years since I last spotted you.
On my birthday, an afternoon, you showed yourself to me.
I run here almost every other day,
and check if you’ve made your way back.
I run through a signal, across train tracks and a pedestrian
bridge.
There is an open gate delivering me from asphalt to padded
ground,
where hemlock has grown far above my head.
At one point the path is submerged,
three slender logs, in succession, lie against a rusted iron
fence.
I know exactly which log not to trust,
and when to leap for the puddle’s shore.
Through another gate there is a causeway,
It is much more fun to take the circuitous path next to the
waterfront.
With ups and downs to accelerate,
bottles and twine left by fisherman to hurdle.
I venture out there around Cesar Chavez park just before sunset.
Each time, slowing when I reach a sign marking your intermittent
dwelling.
Stepping onto a block wall, I peer across a corner preserved
for you by lovers of wildthings.
But today, time is pushed forward.
A family walk extends into the evening,
with darkness almost arrived.
Moist gray air, still water, damp ground.
Two boys thrash sticks at hemlock,
orioles and sparrows chortle back through branches.
Reaching your preserved corner, factory lights diffract across
water toward your hillside.
A labyrinth of burrows beneath my feet,
you may be tucked inside a deep side chute.
Built for you by your compadres, the voluptuous squirrels.
Maybe you bring a nice little gift for your hosts who do not
seem to mind your hanging about.
I jump upon the block to spot you,
no longer in anticipation, just a diurnal rhythm.
It’s now so very dark.
A horn blows twice hitting my back.
Still, nothing. Oh, well.
Further down the path,
my family is pointing.
Spotters, much better than I.
Sure, enough lights glean across the grass and two sharp
horns are barely perceivable.
Six or seven centimeters, a round body protrudes from the Earth.
White breast, black eyes, white face, brown wings.
Stillness, it could be a rock but its shape is undeniable.
So wise, this visitor waits until dark when dogs and their
walkers have long piled into their hatchbacks.
An hour, to push out a cubby and prey a corner’s delights.
Wings, beat suddenly into a gray blanket.
A form plunges toward water,
Something dangles from beak.
Instantly, wings refold on a grassy knoll.
A statue in darkness once again, two black eyes no longer discernible.
Hunger pangs, yanks on my sleeve, time to go.
Reluctant burrowing owl, until we meet again.