Friday, July 11, 2025

Dark Secrets in Rattlesnake Heaven

 —Poetry and Photos by Taylor Graham,
Placerville, CA
—And then scroll down for
Form Fiddlers’ Friday, with poetry by 
Nolcha Fox, Stephen Kingsnorth,
and Joyce Odam


WHEAT FIELD WITH CYPRESSES
    Vincent Van Gogh, Saint-Rémy, 1889

This landscape seethes with living heat,
sun’s cloud-convection white on blue
reflected, rising off a sheet
so blank, the colors beckon you

to paint. It’s solitude’s purlieu.
This landscape seethes with living heat,
it roils up under clouds that brew
a thought of storm, a thunder beat

beyond horizon. Here, your feet
might stir red poppies—just a few.
This landscape seethes with living heat,
impassive to man’s presence. Who

would think to ease the soul, renew
the spirit in this place?  Just wheat,
two trees, the questing sky. Like you,
this landscape seethes with living heat.
 
 
 

 
THE MUSE SAID

Forget the thought you had
that just lacks brilliant poetic words.

Wordless is the image
in your brain, a string of syllables

dreams too darkly secret
to be translated into language

a swash of linguistic paints,
colors, textures, a dance-beat

one step, one sound leading
to the next—what might you discover?
 
 
 

 
SO MANY QUESTIONS

Was someone smoking weed
where you sweat early mornings
to cut nature’s dead stuff?

A long way inside your fences—
how did this Diablo Kush
get on your property?

Was it there last week
in your wild west corner
of rock and tall dead grasses?

Is that a pleasant spot
among poison oak and stickers
to sit and get high?

Can’t whoever did this
be soberly aware
it’s rattlesnake heaven?

Is it a place to get euphoric
and, while feeling wonderful,
start a wild grass fire?
 
 
 
 
 
DARK SECRETS

in the mouth of the dead oak stump
open to swarms of tiny gnats, a fallen oak-
leaf is caught, twirling on a strand of spider silk,
its leaf-kin becoming soil in the oak’s mouth.
On the stump’s cheek a red spot is painted:
another oak—that might conceivably fall
on the power line—must be cut down;
its open cavity, where birds nest and wild
creatures find shelter, will be gone. These two
oaks are friends united by roots, birdsong,
and the dark secrets in their mouths.
 
 
 
 

ABANDONED RESORT

We’re
walking
on a whole
summer’s sun—this
tiny, vibrantly
yellow Bird’s-foot Trefoil.
 
 
 
 

8000 FT ELEVATION

How does this meadow bloom sublime
against the summit’s ultra glare,
so short its season in thin air?
Each blossom makes the most of time.

__________________

Today’s LittleNip:

ABOVE THE DRY CREEK
—Taylor Graham

What are these rocks for?
Gray’s the shade of life beyond
the gravity of breathing.

__________________

Our thanks to Taylor Graham today; she’s talking about summer, and about its effects on the world of the Sierra foothills.
Rattlesnakss love it, though, so watch where you hang out...

Forms TG has sent us today include a Quatern that is also an Ekphrastic poem based on Van Gogh (“Wheat Field with Cypresses”); an Ars Poetica  that is also a Just 15s (“The Muse Said”); a Katauta (“Above the Dry Creek”); a Triversen (“So Many Questions”); a Response to our Tuesday Seed of the Week (“Dark Secrets”); some Stepping Stones (“Abandoned Resort”); and a Memoriam Quatrain (“8000 Ft Elevation”). Those dark secrets are woven into a couple of other of TG’s poems today (“dreams too darkly secret”). Such secrets have a way of sneaking into poems, don’t they? The Quatern and the Quatrain were two of last week’s Triple-F Challenges.

El Dorado County Poet Laureate Emeritus Lara Gularte will be one of the presenters at the
Círculo de poetas & Writers Conference '25 to be held both in-person (Aug. 23) and online (Aug. 30) in Santa Cruz, CA. Check it out/register/all that good stuff at https://circulowriters.com/.

In El Dorado County poetry, Poetic License will meet in Placerville this coming Monday, 7/14, 10:30am. Suggested topic is "fireplace", but any subject is welcome. And El Dorado County’s regular workshops are listed on Medusa’s calendar (if you scroll down on http://medusaskitchen.blogspot.com/p/wtf.html/). For more news about such events and about EDC poetry—past (photos!) and future—see Taylor Graham’s Western Slope El Dorado Poetry on Facebook at www.facebook.com/ElDoradoCountyPoetry. Or see Lara Gularte’s Facebook page at https://www.facebook.com/groups/382234029968077/. And you can always click on Medusa's UPCOMING NORCAL EVENTS (http://medusaskitchen.blogspot.com/p/wtf.html). Poetry is Gold in El Dorado County!  
 
And now it’s time for…     

 
FORM FIDDLERS’ FRIDAY!  
 
It’s time for more contributions from Form Fiddlers, in addition to those sent to us by Taylor Graham! Each Friday, there will be poems posted here from our readers using forms—either ones which were sent to Medusa during the previous week, or whatever else floats through the Kitchen and the perpetually stoned mind of Medusa. If these instructions are vague, it's because they're meant to be. Just fiddle around with some challenges—  Whaddaya got to lose… ? If you send ‘em, I’ll post ‘em! (See Medusa’s Form Finder at the end of this post for resources and for links to poetry terms used in today’s post.)


Check out our recently-refurbed page at the top of Medusa’s Kitchen called, “FORMS! OMG!!!” which expresses some of my (take ‘em or leave 'em) opinions about the use of forms in poetry writing, as well as listing some more resources to help you navigate through Form Quicksand and other ways of poetry. Got any more resources to add to our list? Send them to kathykieth@hotmail.com for the benefit of all man/woman/poetkind!



* * *
 
 
 Last Week’s Ekphrastic Photo


Poets who sent responses to last week’s Ekphrastic photo were Nolcha Fox, and Stephen Kingsnorth:


SAND BETWEEN OUR TOES
—Nolcha Fox, Buffalo, WY

When we met, we walked along
the surfline on the beach.

We didn’t know that walk would lead
to love and life together.

We may be growing older,
but we will not grow up.

Hand in hand, we’ll always walk
with sand between our toes.


* * *

NOT WALKING BUT DROWNING 
 (from Sylvia Plath Hughes)
—Stephen Kingsnorth, Coedpoeth, Wrexham, Wales


An error made that this the norm,
joint bare-foot wading, final lap,
though waves suggest uneasy crest,
that final rest not as expect,
as storms, say, mark our closing days,
weigh heavily as drag retreats.

What may turnup, concluding leg,
and leave us stranded, sands of time,
when bucket list lost in the mist—
e’en memories are cut adrift.
No wonder angle from behind,
as partners passing where once surfed?

For many, most, this day retreats.
So walking past the setting light—
these shadows fall behind their lead;
but what lies there where now they tread—
coloured reflections on their past,
a watercolour of their moves.

A tidal wave, demented souls,
cognition gone of relatives;
though music of a childhood, note,
breaks the sound barrier imposed;
those songs of Sunday School once sung,
or rhymes of nursery rehearsed.

Her bag. coat style, his glance suggest
to me that she out of her depth;
except she paces nearer froth,
exposure one might not expect.
I learnt as boy, my father taught
that man should walk kerbside on street.

For those whose closest left the fray,
whose days have parted from the way,
or those whose crumbling frame precedes
shared journeys in the latter phase;
as prime and tide too soon recede
those privileged to last stands clear.

* * *

Joyce Odam has sent us a Stefanile Triadic Sonnet today which speaks to us of dark secrets:
 
 
 
THE HAUNTED CHILDREN
Stefanile Triadic Sonnet
—Joyce Odam, Sacramento, CA


The paths meander in and out of sight—               
the old house, watching, can’t see to the end.      
The children love to play out there all night.    
 
The windows watch the children wend and wend.   
Something entices. The children want to know,       
for moonlight flickers—all the pathways glow.        
The old house worries. Windows try to warn         
as nightly winds come up. Trees moan and bend.     
The maze-paths deepen where the shadows blend.    
Leaves fall like tears . . . the children are unborn.        
Their mother weeps but can’t remember why.          

The mother dreads another haunted dawn.             
The house still thinks it hears the children cry.      
The children safely dream the old house gone.       
                                                       

(prev. pub. in
Poets’ Forum Magazine;
and in Medusa’s Kitchen, 11/1/11)


* * *

And here, from Stephen Kingsnorth, is an Ekphrastic poem which is also an Ars Poetica, all about this mysterious empty chair. What the note we underscore?
 
 
 Untitled, Jannis Kounellis, 1969 (Greece/Italy)


RSVP
—Stephen Kingsnorth

Untitled always provokes, prompts,
why such a void, RSVP,
or better hint, vacuum abhorred,
as interactive must proceed?
The chair was occupied, unveiled,
a cellist, playing manuscript
itself in darkened corner set,
St John’s Passion, a fragment, Bach.
Here’s history and living art,
a mix of disciplines to muse,
from eye transposed, expectant ear
less vacancy goes unfulfilled.

But each musician for their part
will play as only they perform,
no two ever conformity,
so each rendition own alone.
The staged work may be commonplace,
and ours the choice of choir involved,
but what of chair unoccupied,
and our sense of entitlement?
A seat of judgement, gospel tale,
of status, academia,
the leadership for board’s debate,
but what the note we underscore?

__________________

Many thanks to today’s writers for their lively contributions! Wouldn’t you like to join them? All you have to do is send poetry—forms or not—and/or photos and artwork to kathykieth@hotmail.com. We post work from all over the world, including that which was previously-published. Just remember: the snakes of Medusa are always hungry!

__________________

TRIPLE-F CHALLENGES!

See what you can make of these challenges, and send your results to kathykieth@hotmail.com/. (No deadline.) Respond to Joyce Odam’s lovely Stefanile Triadic Sonnet with one of your own:

•••Sonnet, Stefanile Triadic: http://everysonnet.blogspot.com/2013/01/stefanile-triadic-sonnet.html

•••AND/OR “one sound leading to the next—what might you discover?” says Taylor Graham’s muse. Write us an Alliterisen, with its alliteration bundled up inside:

•••Alliterisen: www.shadowpoetry.com/resources/wip/alliterisen.html

•••See also the bottom of this post for another challenge, this one an Ekphrastic one.

•••And don’t forget each Tuesday Seed of the Week! This week it’s “Beyond Absurd”.

____________________

MEDUSA’S FORM FINDER: Links to poetry terms mentioned today:

•••Ars Poetica: www.poetryfoundation.org/learn/glossary-terms/ars-poetica
•••Ekphrastic Poem: notesofoak.com/discover-literature/ekphrastic-poetry
•••Just 15s (devised by Sarah Harding): poem or stanza of 15 syllables
•••Katauta: www.writersdigest.com/whats-new/katauta-poetic-form
•••Quatrain: www.masterclass.com/articles/poetry-101-what-is-a-quatrain-in-poetry-quatrain-definition-with-examples
•••Quatern: www.shadowpoetry.com/resources/wipquatern.html AND/OR www.masterclass.com/articles/how-to-write-a-quatern#what-is-a-quatern
•••Response Poem: creativetalentsunleashed.com/2015/11/18/writing-tip-response-poems
•••Sonnet, Stefanile Triadic: http://everysonnet.blogspot.com/2013/01/stefanile-triadic-sonnet.html
•••Stepping Stones (devised by Claire Baker): Syllables 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6 (7, etc.)
•••Triversen: www.writersdigest.com/write-better-poetry/triversen-poetic-form
•••Tuesday Seed of the Week: a prompt listed in Medusa’s Kitchen every Tuesday; poems may be any shape or size, form or no form. No deadlines; past ones are listed at http://medusaskitchen.blogspot.com/p/calliopes-closet.html/. Send results to kathykieth#hotmail.com/.

__________________

—Medusa
 
 
 
 Today's Ekphrastic Challenge!
 
 Make what you can of today's
picture, and send your poetic results to
kathykieth@hotmail.com/. (No deadline.)

* * *

—Artwork Courtesy of Public Domain
 
 
 
 
 















 
 
 
 
 
For info about
future poetry happenings in
Northern California and otherwheres,
click on
UPCOMING NORCAL EVENTS
(http://medusaskitchen.blogspot.com/p/wtf.html)
in the links at the top of this page—
and keep an eye on this link and on
the daily Kitchen for happenings
that might pop up
—or get changed!—
 during the week.

Photos in this column can be enlarged by
clicking on them once, then clicking on the x
in the top right corner to come back to Medusa.

Poets’ bios appear on their first MK visit.
To find previous posts, type the name
of the poet (or poem) into the little
beige box at the top left-hand side
of this column. See also
Medusa’s Rapsheet at the bottom
of the blue column on the right
side of this column to find
any date you want.

Miss a post?
You can find our most recent ones by
scrolling down under this daily one.
Or there's an "Older Posts" button
at the bottom of this column.
(Please excuse typos in older posts!
Blogspot has been through a lot of
incarnations in 20 years!)

Would you like to be a SnakePal?
Guidelines are at the top of this page
at the Placating the Gorgon link;
send poetry and/or photos and artwork
to kathykieth@hotmail.com. We post
work from all over the world—including
that which was previously published—
and collaborations are welcome.
Just remember:
the snakes of Medusa are always hungry—
for poetry, of course!
 
Rattlesnakes just wanna have fun~
 




























Thursday, July 10, 2025

Don't Go Yet

 —Poetry by Nolcha Fox, Buffalo, WY
—Public Domain Photos Courtesy
of Nolcha Fox
 
 
CHAIRS

1.
Sinkable, suck in,
butt in, think a
deck chair, ship down,
grab the foam
before it grabs you,
sucks you down.

2.
High life, high chair,
belly up to
chug it down,
up in air, air head,
head over heels,
crybaby, watch her leave.

3.
Cheers for the chairs,
legs that trip, that
fail to grip,
that leave
a skid mark
on the floor.
 
 
 

 
ANOTHER DEAD LETTER

Not what’s lost
in some post office
room full of letters
undelivered,
no, it’s the letters
that fail to form
words dropping
from my lips,
dead weights,
dead letters,
an embarrassment
of failed
migrations.
 
 
 

 
I’M THAT WEIRD GIRL

eating with my hands
under the trees in the park.
Grease drips down
my hands and face.
My lips are stained
from berry kisses.
Crumbs and clutter
flutter in the breeze
and fall around me.
Mothers pushing strollers
wrinkle noses
and rush by
without a wave.
Birds and squirrels
approach, applaud
and join me in the feast
under the trees.
 
 
 

 
HOT MAMA

I am a radiator
set to high
on the hottest
day of the year.
Steam fizzes
out of my ears.
My face puts
a furnace to shame.
Let me stick my head
in the freezer,
breathe out
this hot flash
into refrigerated silence.
 
 
 

 
STUMPING THE BARISTA

He asks me what I want today.
It’s something he can’t give me.
No frappuccino can replace
the love I lost this morning.
He drums his fingers,
I hear mumbling
from the folks behind me.
One tall coffee, please, I say,
And please add cream and grief.
 
 
 

 
BLAME IT ON THE RAIN

I blame the rain
that chased you
from your seat
across from me.

Did you regret
that you forgot
your raincoat
and your hat?

Did the wet
douse your desire?
Did you recall
another just like me?

You never said
your name or
left a number
I could call.

You were a
single drop in time
that vanished
into mist.
 
 
 
 
 
IN THE WORLD OF ALONE

If I brush my teeth and hair,
no one gives a hoot.
I rarely dress in shoes and socks.
I live with only me.

From my world of all alone,
the fashion police have scattered.
They can’t convince this bag of bones
that beauty really matters.

Online orders keep me safe
from idle talk and traffic.
I’m content to stay in bed
with holes in my pajamas.

Don’t worry, I am happy with
no need to clean my house.
So, if you smell ammonia,
it means that I am dead.
 
 
 

 
FALL

I wonder if the trees might fear
the fall of falling leaves
as much as I fear falling
when wind blows fall
into white chill and ice
is on the sidewalk.
 
 
 
 

DON’T GO YET

It’s too early to depart.
Defy the wind, don’t fall away.
Don’t leave me to the winter white.
Don’t go, don’t go, don’t go.

Defy the wind, don’t fall away.
Enjoy the slanting sun with me.
Don’t go, don’t go, don’t go.
Don’t tell me we all end.

Enjoy the slanting sun with me.
Don’t leave me to the winter white.
Don’t tell me we all end.
It’s too early to depart.
 
 
 

 
Today’s LittleNip:

Dinner never tastes as good
as the picture on the
frozen dinner box.

—Nolcha Fox

__________________

—Medusa, with thanks to Nolcha Fox for today’s fine poetry, and for finding the photos to go with it!
 
 
 
 —Public Domain Illustration Courtesy of Medusa














 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
A reminder that
Sac Poets Society will hold
a workshop with Pat Grizzell
in Sacramento tonight, 7pm.
For info about this and other
future poetry happenings in
Northern California and otherwheres,
click on
UPCOMING NORCAL EVENTS
(http://medusaskitchen.blogspot.com/p/wtf.html)
in the links at the top of this page—
and keep an eye on this link and on
the daily Kitchen for happenings
that might pop up
—or get changed!—
 during the week.

Photos in this column can be enlarged by
clicking on them once, then clicking on the x
in the top right corner to come back to Medusa.

Poets’ bios appear on their first MK visit.
To find previous posts, type the name
of the poet (or poem) into the little
beige box at the top left-hand side
of this column. See also
Medusa’s Rapsheet at the bottom
of the blue column on the right
side of this column to find
any date you want.

Miss a post?
You can find our most recent ones by
scrolling down under this daily one.
Or there's an "Older Posts" button
at the bottom of this column.
(Please excuse typos in older posts!
Blogspot has been through a lot of
incarnations in 20 years!)

Would you like to be a SnakePal?
Guidelines are at the top of this page
at the Placating the Gorgon link;
send poetry and/or photos and artwork
to kathykieth@hotmail.com. We post
work from all over the world—including
that which was previously published—
and collaborations are welcome.
Just remember:
the snakes of Medusa are always hungry—
for poetry, of course!
 
That letter is dead because
I killed it~
 

















 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Wednesday, July 09, 2025

Infinities

 
Sliced Radish
—Poetry by Katy Brown, Davis, CA
—Photos by Kevin Laubacher, Portland, OR
 
 
Consider this bowl of sliced radishes:

the patience of the man who stood
in the sunlit kitchen over a bowl
of washed red globes and took them
one by one to slice them with his knife.

His cuts, as precise as any professional
working in a French kitchen.
The radish rounds, falling away one
by one by one until they filled the bowl.
It was a meditation, of sorts: his focus
on the precise placement of the radish,
the position of his fingers, and the knife,
sharp and cutting through each globe
with a satisfying crunch, then thump
into the cutting board.  

Then the careful scoop of the slices
into the bowl until it was full.
The radish slices, themselves,
a composition in red and white.
Each thin round edged in red skin;
each slice, an astonishing star
of white root, radiating
from the center, glossy with
the clear juice of the simple root.

The man paused from time to time
to pop a slice into his watering mouth.
 
 
 
Dogwood
 
 
DOGWOOD

twisted branches
humble among the
towering forest

crucifix of bracts
first color of spring
light among
dark moss and
shadows

crown of yellow flowers
call the first pollen hunters
from winter slumber
promise another spring
of life and growth

rusty stigmata
on each petal
deepens legend
of this mountain flower

dogwood shines, a beacon
in the shadowed glen
when winter steps
aside for spring

flowers held in
supplication for
rain and sun each
season brings
 
 
 
The Green is Palpable
 
 
GREEN
(after “The green is
palpable” by Kevin Laubacher)


first shoots in the spring:
tender grass, unfurled leaves,
slender daffodil spears;

green tractors dragging
cones of dust over
corduroy fields;

jade moss over stream-side rocks;
green eyes of the feral cat;

‘tis the Luck o’ the Irish;
the signal to go;
the color of money;

evergreen — the color of lasting love;
the heart of bewitching emeralds;
the color of a jealous heart;
fresh surprise of mint;
the shadow of ferns;

Grűn ist die hoffnungsvolle Farbe

the Germans say;
Green is the hopeful Color;

before life crawled out of the sea,
vegetation beckoned —
it was green that called us.
 
 
 
Prehistoric Fern
 
 
LIVING WITH THE PREHISTORIC

Walking in redwood growth,
or living among ancient trees
in the northern rainforests,
gives us a window on the past.

Before life crawled out of the sea,
something green must have
come to root among
the jagged rocks along the shore.

Primitive plants gave shelter
to the timid world.  
Look to the ferns:
these basic plants.  No flowers
no fancy bark or showy colors.
Back then, there were no eyes
to appreciate such a spectacle.

Ferns carry the next generations
in spores that grow in scales
on the underside of fronds.
Each frond makes hundreds of
potential reproductions of itself.

In the primeval forest,
through a shaft of sunlight,
if you listen closely,
you can hear the sound of
wind high in the trees,
hear the drip of water
falling from the tallest branches.

Notice the emerald ferns,
waiting for time to scatter seed.
Waiting for peace of the silent trees;
waiting in the shade of giants.
They have been waiting for eons
to reclaim the forest floor.
 
 
 
Good Morning Sun
 
 
My mind rejects such raw perfection,

yet I can’t seem to look away:
sunrise on a crystal morning
in an aquamarine sky.

I am animated chaos, moving
through an asymmetric world.
The nearly-perfect are everywhere:
the helix in a bright sunflower,
my grandchild’s crooked smile,
an orchid’s dainty slipper.

And still, I seek the holy —
the one uniting force —
that light that rises over dark
and ever draws me home.  
I’m mesmerized by paradox.

While all creation is so imperfect,
my mind seeks calm in the disarray.
I feel a kinship with unruly nature:
the birch that tosses in the wind,
a bumblebee’s off-kilter flight,
the ever-changing path of tides.

This perfect symmetry of light
and dark in balance on a fulcrum
of the rising sun — this precision
is unsettling.  This light seduces
my willing spirit to slip back into eternity.


(from the photo “Good Morning Sun”
by Kevin Laubacher)
 
 
 
Rosebud and Dew
 
 
ROSEBUD WITH DEW
(Moving toward Infinity, part 1)

Droplets on the rosebud
sparkle in clear morning light.
You can almost smell the deep
fragrance of this fragile flower.

Everything is in such clear focus:
the drops of water,
the edges of the opening bud,
the veins in the petals that
pump life to the unfolding flower.

Do you remember your science class?
The lessons about fractals?
This image is so clear, you can see
the living, unexpectedly jagged, edges
of this perfect bud.  
It’s as though you can see the very cells
that make up the flower, growing
on the rim.  It would be impossible to
measure the perimeter of just one petal.
This rosebud holds infinity.

And if you look closely at the dewdrops,
they hold the reflected image
of the photographer, his arms propping up
the camera and the eye of the lens.
Captured in this photograph are infinities
of relationship and life.
This is only one unfolding flower,
captured one morning by one observant
photographer.  
 
 
 
 The World in Hindsight

 
THE WORLD AS IT SEEMS — AND NOT

I remember when I was legally blind:
the time before my cataract surgery.
I could make out people on the sidewalk,
but not their features.
I could see bicycle riders, but no details.
The flaw was in my vision, not the world.

Before the world went out of focus,
I loved reflections in the water:  the world
seen upside down.  And through water:
magnified and distorted.  
And sounds that travel over the rush of water,
muffled and mingled with birdsong and wind.

Reflections on glass often contain
the ghostly images of that which lies behind
the clear barrier, creating a story behind the story.

Images in a rearview mirror add a dimension
of distance, or wonder, or of fiction to an image.
How much of life is a reflection of a reflection?
A view of the hidden, fleeting world?  

Years ago, Ursula K. Le Guin was driving away
from Salem, Oregon.  She happened to look
in the rearview mirror and saw OMELAS.
From that experience came her haunting story:
The Ones Who Walk Away From Omelas.

Reflections and reflections of reflections
contain a mystery that nibbles at the mind.
How much of the world is really there?
What we think we see is really only a reflection
of what is projected in the back of our eyes.
Yet another dimension of reflected image.

The world is as it seems — and not.
 
 
 
 Ambush

 
THE ART OF AMBUSH

You have to pick a common place,
the top of a tree or bureau.
Or you can hide low, under the sofa,
or just inside the closet, or
inside an abandoned paper bag.

The trick is to keep still.
To stay silent.  No purring.
No slightly twitching tail,
the tell-tale sound that
gives you away.

And you must be sure your sibling
is sound asleep in another room.
They will give you away
in an instant, thwarting your
well-planned ambush.

It’s especially effective if you
are shadow-color to start with.
And you must make sure that your prey
can’t see your eyes.  Mammals have a
primitive instinct that they are being watched.
If you must peek, use only one eye.

If you use a paper bag, be sure to   
wait until the prey is reaching
for the empty bag to fold.
Then burst out!  Claws flexed
to grab the unsuspecting hand.

Their yelp of surprise is
worth the hours of waiting.
Patience is the sly cat’s friend.

____________________

Today’s LittleNip:

Perfection is not attainable, but if we chase perfection we can catch excellence.

—Vince Lombardi

____________________

—Medusa, with thanks to Katy Brown for her fine poetry today, and to her collaborator, Kevin Laubacher, for his excellent photography! 
 
NorCal poets will be saddened to learn that Sacramento Poet Norma Kohout passed away yesterday at the age of 103. Norma was very active in NorCal poetry; among other things, she and Joyce Odam led the Wednesday workshop at the Hart Center for many years. You'll be missed, Norma!
 
 
 
Kevin Laubacher




















 
 
 
 
 
For info about
future poetry happenings in
Northern California and otherwheres,
click on
UPCOMING NORCAL EVENTS
(http://medusaskitchen.blogspot.com/p/wtf.html)
in the links at the top of this page—
and keep an eye on this link and on
the daily Kitchen for happenings
that might pop up
—or get changed!—
 during the week.

Photos in this column can be enlarged by
clicking on them once, then clicking on the x
in the top right corner to come back to Medusa.

Poets’ bios appear on their first MK visit.
To find previous posts, type the name
of the poet (or poem) into the little
beige box at the top left-hand side
of this column. See also
Medusa’s Rapsheet at the bottom
of the blue column on the right
side of this column to find
any date you want.

Miss a post?
You can find our most recent ones by
scrolling down under this daily one.
Or there's an "Older Posts" button
at the bottom of this column.
(Please excuse typos in older posts!
Blogspot has been through a lot of
incarnations in 20 years!)

Would you like to be a SnakePal?
Guidelines are at the top of this page
at the Placating the Gorgon link;
send poetry and/or photos and artwork
to kathykieth@hotmail.com. We post
work from all over the world—including
that which was previously published—
and collaborations are welcome.
Just remember:
the snakes of Medusa are always hungry—
for poetry, of course!
 

 

















 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Tuesday, July 08, 2025

Sorrow And All Her Secrets

  Wherever Time Finds You
—Poetry by Joyce Odam and Robin Gale Odam,
Sacramento, CA
—Photos and Original Art by Joyce Odam
 
 
CALANDO
—Robin Gale Odam

When the credits roll, when happily
ever after is embraced and the story
cleaves to a strand of illusion, the music
becomes slower and softer, dying away.
                             

(prev. pub. in Brevities, October 2016;
Sacramento Poetry Anthology 2017;
Song of the San Joaquin
, Winter 2017;
and in Medusa’s Kitchen, 6/29/24)
 
 
 
 The Ruse


COMMISERATION
—Joyce Odam

Sorrow came to sit with me again,
as many times before,
claiming to be my mother—

again with her old sad story,
her soft tears burning in the light
reflecting every word upon her face.

                                    
(prev. pub. in Medusa’s Kitchen, 10/22/24)
 
 
 
 The Mystery Of The Self


GHOSTS
—Joyce Odam

…something that lingers
not quite gone
diffusements in memory
hanging on
to the spent realities
like a tune that teases
of a half-remembered song

ghosts stay on
where they are wanted
they belong
to your disturbance
to your relinquishment…
as long
as you want them
ghosts stay on…


(prev. pub. in Aquarian Dream, October 1996;
and in Medusa’s Kitchen, 11/1/11; 11/1/22)
 
 
 
 Aquarium


MIRAGE OR NIGHTFALL
—Robin Gale Odam

I
The one-subject notebook, the frozen
poem, the one metonym for yesterday.

II
Just something about this night.

III
At the underside of the water tiny fishes
sip at the veneer of another world.
                             

(prev. pub. in Medusa’s Kitchen, 4/4/23) 
 
 
 
 Nothing Left To Give


HAUNTED  
—Joyce Odam

I wrestle with your obstinate ghost,
ever-angry and unforgiving,

what a wild loving and hating—
never resolved,

the push and pull of difference—
ever-faithful to the war.

Even now, you assail me in dreams,
still wanting my surrender.
                                

(prev. pub. in Medusa’s Kitchen, 12/31/24)
 
 
 
 The Politics of Love


STALEMATE
—Joyce Odam

we are not friends
we are not
lovers now

we are
a cage

we lock each other
we threaten
freedom

                 
(prev. pub. in Prophetic Voices, 1992;
Lovebites Chapbook by Joyce Odam, 199l;
and in Medusa’s Kitchen, 10/16/10; 7/7/20)
 
 
 
 Listening


MOMAZIA
Band 10, Lifescapes by Emanuel Kirakou
(Relaxing Guitar and Cello)
—Joyce Odam


Oh player of sad music that hurts
my heart—I need to feel what you
make me feel—music that holds me

so still, so haunted—oh player
of sad music, too beautiful to
bear—this is what I want to hear.
                                 

(prev. pub. in Medusa’s Kitchen, 7/10/10; 1/16/18) 
 
 
 
 The Silence


WE WHO ABANDON, WE WHO SEEK
—Joyce Odam

Oh, father, who left me, who
I equate with god—what do I mean

by refusal to love, to let return?
Why keep the question alive—
 
that cry without answer—
seek nothing where nothing is?

Oh, father, who became a forge,
I am incomplete.
                                  

(prev. pub. in Medusa’s Kitchen, 6/19/12) 
 
 
 
 The Twilight


SHADE
—Robin Gale Odam

counterpoint of light
no one knows that she is gone
into dark of day
searching for a memory
searching for a memory
               

(prev. pub. in Brevities, December 2017)
 
 
 
 You Tell Me Your Dream


HEALING
—Joyce Odam

I shall not look again to sorrow
with its bruised wing that I
have pushed away. I am not

its love. I will not let it
stay with me, though it calls me
winter and starves when I

look at it. I am going to be in
love with happiness—with
its safe heart and hands

that flutter
ever-so-softly
about my habit of weeping.  
                           

(prev. pub. in Sorrows Mini-Chap by Joyce Odam,
2002; and in Medusa’s Kitchen, 10/22/24)
 
 
 
 
 No Compromise


Today’s LittleNip:

MIND-POWER
—Joyce Odam

You are that maze
I never get through.

How did you
make yourself so clever,
without an exit?

How did I
get in?


(prev. pub. in
Parting Gifts, 1996;
and in
Brevities Mini-Chap)

___________________

Joyce Odam and Robin Gale Odam have shown us some of their poetic secrets today for our Seed of the Week, Dark Secrets, and we thank them for that.

Our new Seed of the Week is “Beyond Absurd”. Send your poems, photos & artwork about this (or any other) subject to kathykieth@hotmail.com. No deadline on SOWs, though, and for a peek at our past ones, click on “Calliope’s Closet”, the link at the top of this column, for plenty of others to choose from. And see every Form Fiddlers’ Friday for poetry form challenges, including those of the Ekphrastic type. And be sure to check each Tuesday for the latest Seed of the Week

___________________

—Medusa
 
 
 
Words on a Page
—Photo by Joyce Odam
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 











 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
A reminder that 
Sherre Vernon and Paula Sheil
read tonight in Modesto, 7pm.
For future poetry happenings in
Northern California and otherwheres,
click on
UPCOMING NORCAL EVENTS
(http://medusaskitchen.blogspot.com/p/wtf.html)
in the links at the top of this page—
and keep an eye on this link and on
the daily Kitchen for happenings
that might pop up
—or get changed!—
 during the week.

Photos in this column can be enlarged by
clicking on them once, then clicking on the x
in the top right corner to come back to Medusa.

Poets’ bios appear on their first MK visit.
To find previous posts, type the name
of the poet (or poem) into the little
beige box at the top left-hand side
of this column. See also
Medusa’s Rapsheet at the bottom
of the blue column at the right
side of this column to find
any date you want.

Miss a post?
You can find our most recent ones  by
scrolling down under this daily one.
Or there's an "Older Posts" button
at the bottom of this column.
(Please excuse typos in older posts!
Blogspot has been through a lot of
incarnations in 20 years!)

Would you like to be a SnakePal?
Guidelines are at the top of this page
at the Placating the Gorgon link;
send poetry and/or photos and artwork
to kathykieth@hotmail.com. We post
work from all over the world—including
that which was previously published—
and collaborations are welcome.
Just remember:
the snakes of Medusa are always hungry—
for poetry, of course!
 
Are the ghosts gone yet?