“The Sky a Flawless Blue,” “When your Muse has Left the Building,” and “My Own Little Beast”

“The Sky a Flawless Blue,” “When your Muse has Left the Building,” and “My Own Little Beast”

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Photo by Christopher K on Unsplash

The Sky a Flawless Blue

The sky, a flawless blue,

the kind of California day,

that gets under your skin.

Scaffolds holding up the heavens

stretching against celestial infinity.

Is there a placeholder for me

in that expanse?

Feels like the heavenly court

is looking down beckoning,

demanding a reckoning

I look up and wonder,

who am I anyway?

I suppose I should have figured it out by now.

I think about what I’ve done in this life,

what gifts I’ve given the world,

what I’m most proud of,

what I wish I could do over.

I think about where I’m still needed,

what I could still accomplish,

in the remainder of my allotted days.

I pray to those luminous blue skies

that my poetry, carefully wrought, finely tuned,

will make its mark on this good earth,

leaving a legacy bigger than me

destined to live beyond.

So I’ll keep my eye on that flawless sky,

continue to weave my words

and wink at the heavens now and then,

reminding them I’m not ready to

take my place up there yet,

while I’ve still got work to do

and verses to write.

When your Muse has left the Building

for warmer climes

 and you are left struggling at your desk,

 bereft of ideas, of words and lines

wondering where your cleverness has gone

wondering where your wit has wandered

wondering why your creativity has cratered

and in your frustration, you realize

maybe it’s a good thing your muse has taken temporary leave

because at least she’s not pecking away at you

like an itch you can’t scratch

wearing down your confidence

making you question everything about your craft

and maybe you’ll text her to stay away longer

and have a pina colada or two at your expense

during Happy Hour

and only return when she is good and ready

to lift your spirits with sparks and resolve

so your writing will be rejuvenated

and charged with new conviction

filling pages with verses that skitter across the page

for she knows you too well

and writing poetry for you

is not just a whim; it’s real and it matters,

and is your legacy

My Own Little Beast

“That pretty little beast, a poem,

has a mind of its own.”

Sometimes I need it to vibrate, to resonate,

but it only wants to pick at a hangnail.

Sometimes I seek to capture the colors of a rainbow

or a gold-hued sunset

but it only wants to splash

a bucket of blue paint on the sidewalk

Sometimes I want it to make people feel

my words have changed them forever

but it flips me the bird

and laughs in my face

Sometimes I wish for that poem

to be etched on tablets

read aloud in poetry workshops

not disappear like chalk wiped off a blackboard

But sometimes, miraculously, that pretty little beast

makes it to the top of the pile

becomes the teacher’s pet

and takes its rightful place for eternity

inspired by That Little Beast, by Mary Oliver

About the Author

Joanne Jagoda

Joanne Jagoda, formerly a longtime resident of the Oakland Hills, now resides in a lovely retirement community in Walnut Creek where she goes to tap dancing and Zumba classes. Her short stories, poetry and creative nonfiction have appeared on-line and in numerous print anthologies including, The Write Launch, Burningword Literary Journal, Third Harvest, Snapdragon, A Journal of Art and Healing, Quillkeepers Press, The Awakenings Review, The Deronda Review, Dreamers Magazine, Passager, Better After 50, and Still You, Poems of Illness and Healing. Joanne has received two Pushcart Prize nominations and has won a number of contests including first place in the 2022 Gemini Open contest. She continues taking Bay Area writing workshops enjoys Zumba on-zoom, and spoiling her seven grandchildren who call her Savta. Joanne’s first book of poetry My Runaway Hourglass, conceived while she was home sheltering-in-place, was published in summer of 2020 (Poetica Publications).