49 Comments

I am never more delighted than when I learn a delightful new word. Yesterday it was "subsong," which (usually) refers to soft, unstructured vocalizations made by young birds as they're learning to sing. Subsong includes a lot of mimicry and (an adorable detail) is typically made from dense cover, as if the bird is embarrassed.

.

Anyhow, subsong is how I feel about the various forms of art I'm trying to practice right now.

.

I am quiet, to be sure. To hear me,

you will first need to enter

my chosen acre, where my feet

paint lines from house to

garden to forest. You will need to

tilt your head past dogbark and

jaysquawk, place your hand on

the earth even. Only then may you

feel the faint rumble

that signifies I am near,

humming or stringing words

together, drawing, dropping bits

of color into a world as unformed

as this nascent artist --

.

still nest-downy

and shirking the stage,

still riffing softly

from the brush.

Expand full comment

I love this! What a fabulous word and what a gorgeous poem! You may be shirking the stage, but you’re hardly nest-downy. ❤️

Expand full comment

This is actually so good that I wish I could restack it 🥲🎶

Expand full comment

Woah subsong. Wonderfulness

Expand full comment

Subsong! I love it. I think that quiet kind of creating is just as important.

Expand full comment

Rebekah, your poem and posts always enlighten, expand and entertain me, and make me smile, cry and ponder. Subsong--what a gem! I searched and found wonderful descriptions, and even a piece on the difference between subsongs and whisper songs. Goodness. There is a whole prompt in this new word!

Of course, when I see your comments and it is followed by your incredibly powerful, unique and astounding poetry, I feel so grateful, so blessed, and so alive. I am still riffling softly in the brush.

Expand full comment

I’m on a new journey into time

One should have taken years ago

Back to being with me at age eight

Seeing that child now fatherless

Alone in world without understanding

He once walked on road of magic and wonder

Now walking barefoot on dirt road

Littered with broken beer bottles

And smoldering cigarette butts

Expand full comment

This is beautiful. I’m imagining you now walking that road beside your child self. ❤️

Expand full comment

My bottomless sack

Of shits i willingly pledged

Was not bottomless.

Expand full comment

There are so many times when your poems make me wish for a laugh response option rather than only the heart option! I 😂 and ❤️ this.

Expand full comment

A poem about the growth edge…

In the midst of the fray

I picture myself

Sitting atop the peak

Of a mountain’s climb,

Staring with wonder

At the mighty imagination

Dreaming this beauty

Into existence,

Letting the world below

Wrestle and strive

As I forget its meaning.

Expand full comment

"Letting the world below / Wrestle and strive / As I forget its meaning." Beautiful! This captures something I think about a lot, which is the need to be willing and able to zoom in close (feel every feeling, witness every suffering, do the nitty gritty work of love) and also to zoom way out, to feel yourself onto the top of that mountain, to hold all the suffering within a larger perspective.

Expand full comment

Beautiful!

Expand full comment

THis is splendid, Korie! IMlove the entire poem, and these lines "Sitting atop the peak/Of a mountain’s climb,/Staring with wonder/At the mighty imagination/Dreaming this beauty/Into existence,/Letting the world below/Wrestle and strive/As I forget its meaning."

This brought me right to the mountaintop, and it felt as if you had peeked into my heart and soul and found the words unable to be released and gave them freedom. Thank you!

Expand full comment

At the edge of myself

I always find an other.

The ocean pays prostrations to the shore.

The clouds kiss the mountains' crests.

And at the edges of earths atmosphere

All manner of celestial bodies dance

All inside the body of the Universe

The Space holding us all.

All alive, in motion,

We learn of the myth of death

And the reality of dying and being reborn.

At the core of myself is a wellspring of miracles.

They ripple out to the edges

Forging connections along the way

Bringing richer understanding

Through transformation.

In the dead of winter

To some I may appear dormant,

But rejuvenation is a process

An unraveling before an integration

Unseen roots reaching deep

Sustaining my secret progress,

A secret shared among friends

That I've yet to meet.

I look forward to the pleasure of our acquaintance.

Expand full comment

Allie, thank you for sharing this beautiful poem! “rejuvenation is a process / An unraveling before an integration” - I love this (and so many other lines) so much!

Expand full comment

My favourite line was the same as yours Lisa! Beautiful

Expand full comment

Allie, this is such a rich, moving and evocative poem. I like the lines Lisa and Nelly noted, and these few "The ocean pays prostrations to the shore./The clouds kiss the mountains' crests./And at the edges of earths atmosphere/All manner of celestial bodies dance/All inside the body of the Universe..."

These spoke to me immediately--brought me to the shore, the mountain and back to the inner universe of my own heart. Thank you for this beautiful poem.

Expand full comment

I love the idea of haiku as penance and the way you redirect towards creativity.

I'm not sure I am growing. I feel like I'm in winter stasis. Hibernation. Everything slowed down, waiting for spring and warm. Energy stored in buds, inaccessible now. Or maybe there is some quiet, hidden growth, that I'm not even aware of. Today I read that they are starting to tap the sugar maples, which means the sap is rising. Roots quietly reaching down, life quietly flowing up. Maybe spring isn't quite so far away. The world is full of snow but I saw a robin perched on a line. It sang a couple of notes, dropped a poop, and then flew away. I've been reading that snow is a good fertilizer, delivering nitrogen to the soil.

Expand full comment

Melanie, this is so beautiful! If wintering is essential for growth and health, then surely it can count as part of that growth and health, too.

Expand full comment

Thank you, Lisa. I'm struggling to come to terms with wintering as growth. it feels so natural in the world out there and so hard to apply kindly to myself. I've been reading and pondering Katherine May's Wintering, but it really is a revolutionary idea. Hard to wrap my soul around.

Expand full comment

We all have a lot of cultural messaging and socialization stacked against us here! My body did the hard work for me when it came to learning to winter (and learning to value that wintering). I got suddenly very sick in March 2020 (long covid), and for a long time, rest was pretty much the only thing I could do. And yet so much happened inside of me in that comparatively inert space. I feel like the seed nourished by that forced rest is still growing, still blooming, still surprising me.

Expand full comment

A haiku for you

Stop it time and time again

Dopa-mining doom

Expand full comment

Oh my gosh, best last line of a poem ever!!!!!

Expand full comment

Dopa-mining doom!! So good.

Expand full comment

It was the selling

of indulgences that pissed

off Martin Luther

Expand full comment

Hahaha he will not love that I have pre-written my next two haikus then!

Expand full comment

Ah yes! Keith, I am quoting you this Sunday!

Expand full comment

Haha! Thanks, Larry ; )

Expand full comment

I love this. It made me laugh to read that you're writing haikus as penance, and I love that you and Keith worked that out together.

I have been finding recently that I'm able to access more gentleness with myself and others. I think it's because instead of being on social media, I've mostly been slow-reading and annotating a couple of really joyful books, and connecting with a few friends.

Our house was hit with illness again this week and I've felt surprisingly capable even with the extra anxiety and exhaustion. I've been speaking really kindly to myself, and I feel really proud of it. (Oh and also I started therapy this week, and I think just knowing that I'll have that regular outlet is a huge weight off)

Expand full comment

Reading an actual book feels so good and nourishing, doesn’t it? I wish I could make all of this Substack goodness somehow appear on bound pages instead!

I’m sorry to hear you all are dealing with sickness again. Kids are such adorable little germ factories - our schools are flooded with flu at the moment, so I’m trying to make peace with the near inevitable imminence of another round of illness in our household too. How cool to notice a shift in how you’re holding it! And yay for starting therapy and giving yourself a sacred outlet just for you! I hope it’s lovely and nourishing and everything you want it to be.

Expand full comment

I often wish I could take Substack off my devices with me! It's one of the ways I still spend the most time on my phone.

Thank you! I'm feeling very hopeful - which, considering...*everything* feels really good.

Expand full comment

A gentle virtual embrace and quiet applause for you, A.

Expand full comment

Christ God, Almighty

Have too much "time" on my hands

Better wash it off

Expand full comment

Haha yes! Be sure to use lots of soap!

Expand full comment

Yes, thanks Lisa for another prompt in the wide world of prompts. What isn't a prompt? I posted it with a title. I don't care if haikus aren't supposed to have titles.

Expand full comment

"What isn't a prompt?" Yes, yes, yes, exactly! And viewed that way, the world is a constant astonishment.

Expand full comment

I am late to the ferry dock this week, and Lisa, your lovely poem and delightful prompt have been with me through the twists and bends. I love that Keith and you are holding each other acocuntable, and that writing Haikus are the "punishment" for doom scrolling. Can we apply that to the media, the politicos and the designers of this madness? If they had to stop and fashion a haiku befpore spewing more absurdity, perhaps we could be spared much of it?

At any rate, somewhow, wondering what the future holds, Max and the Wild thigns came to mind.

^

When Max was banished to his bedroom

he found the seam and shuffled to a magical place,

delicious and delightful wild beings that simply wanted

him to dance, romp, play and joy-sing for a time.

^

A world where wild and wonder coexist.

^

I sit in this silent room,

peek into the closet and the quiet corners

and whisper into the falling darkness

“it’s okay to come out, now.”

^

Paddling to a different shore,

praying that this harbor be a safe refuge,

hoping that the shadows and shapes awaiting me

are wild things, not demons.

^

Knowing that they are often one and the same.

Expand full comment

Also, the ferry runs all day every day here, so there's no such thing as being late! 🧡

Expand full comment

Hah! Good point! I’ll still try to be in time!

Expand full comment

This is so whimsical and evoactive, Larry! I love the image of you as Max, whispering into the darkness, inviting the wild things out. And this notion "that they are often one and the same" - maybe all of our dichotomies are false - really speaks to me.

Expand full comment

Thank you Lisa! Your are always a gracious and affirming reader!

Expand full comment

Great post. And I love the idea of haikus for when you slip up, brilliant!

Expand full comment

Thank you so much, Nelly!

Expand full comment

Oh the gorgeousness of this poem, Lisa!

Off to read the prompt.

Expand full comment

Thank you so much, friend!

Expand full comment

I love the idea of writing a haiku every time I start to open the NYT app to check on the latest horror. I'm also struggling with finding that balance being being engaged and taking time to nurture joy.

Expand full comment

Feel free to send me any and all haikus of penance if you go that route!

Expand full comment

Will do.

Expand full comment