Meditations from My Room for dVerse Poets, Jan 9, 2025

Meadow Argus / Photographed in Solomon Islands / Michael Sammut

Meditations from My Room

I share different  company in my isolation.
Dogs litter my studio floor,
and my backyard is
an in-between place for birds
passing as though at a freeway interchange,
this way and that.

A constant flutter of butterflies
stirs air around the orange and yellow thunbergia,
lush in this season that mixes sun and rain.
They soar down to the empty lot
and back again,
as though no creature can resist
collecting here in my domain.

Nature follows no rules of man.
It cannot learn obeisance or heed human leverage.
Our world, professional and polished—
how easily by nature now turned inward upon itself.

Our burnished world can hold no sway,
for nature heeds no golden cow.
Her empathy extended toward the broader view,
nature must change the things she can.
She has been patient  with us long enough. The time is now.

For dVerse Poets

To see more poems written for this prompt, go HERE.

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About lifelessons

My blog, which started out to be about overcoming grief, quickly grew into a blog about celebrating life. I post daily: poems, photographs, essays or stories. I've lived in countries all around the globe but have finally come to rest in Mexico, where I've lived since 2001. My books may be found on Amazon in Kindle and print format, my art in local Ajijic galleries. Hope to see you at my blog.

19 thoughts on “Meditations from My Room for dVerse Poets, Jan 9, 2025

  1. merrildsmith's avatarmerrildsmith

    The sharp bite at the end is a powerful contrast to the lyrical lines that come before. I think we’re seeing how nature changes right now with the fires around LA.

    I liked the image this made me see: “as though no creature can resist
    collecting here in my domain. “

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    1. lifelessons's avatarlifelessons Post author

      The California fires are heartbreaking as those are my old stomping grounds that I knew well. Many I know have not come fully “out” since the Covid scare and that is certainly what made me more of a homebody, but in doing so, showed me the wonders of my garden which is now my biggest solace in distressing times. Thanks for your close reading of and response to the poem, Merril.

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  2. Cris's avatarCris

    As an avid nature lover and proponent of turning grass yards into native meadows, I love everything about this.

    “nature heeds no golden cow” – Excellent!

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    1. lifelessons's avatarlifelessons Post author

      I bought the lot next to me to do exactly that, Cris. I can’t even see it unless I go to the edge of my let, open a gate and peer over my wall down into it and yet during the 2 years of Covid isolation, I loved seeing it take shape from the neighborhood dumping ground/trash heap into a wonderful meadow/garden. With construction around me for most of the 23 years I’ve been here, it is the one cushion.

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  3. Melissa Lemay's avatarMelissa Lemay

    I like the solitary isolation of the beginning, where all are welcome and “no creature can resist
    collecting here in my domain”,

    contrasted with the battle cry of an ending, not so much a warning as a joining of forces. One person’s impact can make some difference.

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    1. lifelessons's avatarlifelessons Post author

      If only those with the power to really wreak changes would heed the obvious messages nature is sending. Maybe AI will do a better job of managing our world and certainly part of it will be getting rid of us!

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  4. Eilene Lyon's avatarEilene Lyon

    I’m glad you provide a place of respite for the critters. We have shrunk their available space and the biosphere is becoming dreadfully anemic. What we don’t sustain will not sustain us!

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  5. Lisa or Li's avatarmsjadeli

    Judy, so eloquently composed. ❤ ❤ ❤ It’s a keeper — for as long as we’re around to keep things anyway… I admire Mother Nature’s patience, but enough is enough.

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