Mythos & Marginalia

2015 – 2025: a decade of days


  • sense and sensuality

          Scant silken stream
                                                   dividing line
                                             between reality
                                            and sensuality
                                                             softly
                                                floating upwards
                                                    filling space
                                               between the ribs
                                                    inhale
                                                sandalwood
                                       lavender or patchouli
                                           jasmine
                                         at night
                                    ease the mind
                                      wipe away
                                         remains of the day
                                            you can’t stop
                                                  time
                                          but you can
                                             make it
                                                bearable
                                                   scent
                                          the swiftest route
                                               to memory
                                                 or comfort
                                              as you retreat
                                                from
                                             negative forces
                                      the essence of the moment
                                               returns
                                                a gentle
                                            equilibrium
                                              meditation
                                            moments
                                         for the self
                                             marginalize
                                       negative influences
                                                   neutralize
                                      behaviours and patterns
                                                     creating
                                             an environment
                                                  of hope
                                               and awareness
                                   strengthen the senses
                                                   soften
                                              your world

  • familiar road

    Brightening sky, the questioning why,
    each day.     World not awake, not yet, 
    and neither are you.     Off to work, or 
    off to where?               The road ahead, 
    you only stare. 
    This is not living, but coping. Existing, 
    at this hour.          We do 
    what we must, as we can, in the space 
    stretching between silence and 
    satisfaction.                         Biding time, 
    tempted by what we know 
    and what we need.     Questioning why. 
    Another try, day for day,
    find your way.                   Another wait.
    Familiar road.    Days the same, no one 
    to blame, but your self.    If you choose, 
    if you see, 
    if you try, if you feel.
    The bills arrive, of that we know.
    Is this the only way to go?              Live, 
      as you can, and must, amid the truth, 
     without the trust.       Questioning sky, 
    common day, recognizable road, 
    is there another way?
       It is as much about how you navigate 
                         your way through daylight, 
                      as it is through the darkness. 
    Take the time, know what is right, 
    sustain yourself through the light.

  • word upon word

    Unorganized, like my life, I have stacks and stacks of words piled high.

       Hardcover notebooks and coil-bound scribblers with pages torn out or

    splattered with coffee, the cover crinkled or nonexistent, sticky notes peering

    out all over the place, their purpose no longer evident. 

       A mass of words; random thoughts, heartfelt prose, messages of anger and

    liberation, or letters never sent. The skeletons of lonely poems are sketched

    out in some, partially presented prose full of rhyme and reason set out in

    others. This is my life. 

       This is what I write.

       My handwriting as inconsistent as my days, it gets messy, it gets erased,

    sketches out a questionable trail, but I leave my mark. I hear the pencil press

    my soul into the paper. Sometimes I can hear the pain.

       I write. Often. All the time, and, maybe not enough. 

       While some of my works make it into a manuscript, essay, or rant, the rest of

    the notes rest silently between the covers. Right there, as sure as I am.

       I write things down to remind myself, perhaps for convenience, or maybe

    inspiration. I feel thoughts are better contained splayed out on a page than

    circulating through my mind (that can get dangerous).

       It doesn’t matter so much what I write as much as what I write into it.

    Details matter: questions to somebody who is not around, a laundry list of

    lost and found; theories that wake me at night, or delicious morning thoughts

    because I have them. There are disturbing missives when I can’t bare to say

    the words aloud, guilty pleasures are often allowed, and the remainder of the

    sentences and stanzas are held hostage. Until later.

       There have been magnificent ideas (at least at the time), or scenes that

    belong in a book of mine.

       I write out my life more for myself than those who are allowed a glimpse

    into this restless being.

       What then of those who do not write?

       What do people do when they think they have something to say? What about

    those who do not collect daring thoughts, or mundane messages that

    unexpectedly arrive? Do they leave memory to chance?

       Do they remember specific nights, purposeful conversations, a daughter’s

    encouraging words, or the events that seem to make it or break it in present

    tense?

       Do they not make plans, or set goals?

       How do they account for their sins, or the substance of their self? Have they

    none, or do they not care? Are they unconcerned about where they have

    been, or what they have put themselves through?

       Or why? How? And what about the when, as it changes over and again?

       I spend unaccountable hours writing for me and my accountability.

       I write not for proof, or validity, but to simply ensure these voices I hear

    have space to breathe. Thoughts without a place are uncontrollable, but give

    them a home, a notebook or journal, and they will behave (to a degree) for a

    while.

       I write because I want to read my own depth (which can be both narrow and

    flat, but entirely mine).

       I write because I need to write. 

       I write because I don’t remember what it is like not to write, and I don’t

    want to forget.

  • we seek shelter

         uncertainty comes with change
                      in the weather

                         whether you know it
                                       or not

                the coming rain
                impending pain
                 all part of this life as we feel it
                                   as we see it

                       as we believe it to be

                             we seek shelter
                          relief from the constant heat and humidity 
                             of our days

                    exorbitant excess
                    we feel only regret

                                      an imbalance

                                                             if we have time
                                                           we seek comfort
                                                       if only in our mind

                     it is only uncertainty
                     all in all a probability

                       if we can live with that
            we can curb our expectations
                            whether we know it
                                       or not

  • identity possibility

    Our identity is as much who we are, as who we want to be.

    Who we are; it’s complicated (I know I am) and every once in a while we need to remind ourselves of what makes us unique, interesting, desirable, and worthy.

    I am so many things; defined as much by what I do as what happens to be.

    I am, above all else, a father. The aspects of that role alone change, and will continue to change, as time passes. The importance is not lost on me, nor is it expected.

    I am a brother. I am an orphan of sorts. I am a friend. I am a lover. I am an individual, but I am part of something quite magnificent.

    I am not alone.

    I don’t subscribe to a particular religion, but I do have faith. I won’t simply cop out and say I am spiritual; I was raised Christian and I do not know enough about the alternatives, so, right now, it is what I know.

    I am open to change.

    I am Canadian. I was born here; it is what I have always known.

    I am curious. I am kind. I am present.

    I am aware.

    I am a poet and I am a writer. I choose to differentiate because the roles are not interchangeable, and I will flip back and forth depending on the mood or the muse. Words do not limit me.

    I am who I am, more than what I am.

    I am a historian in as much as I’ve learned the lessons of the past will, often, temper decisions I make about the future. I am here, and I will not go back there.

    I am flawed, at times fucked up, yet I see my shortcomings as opportunities to heal, to change, and to be more understanding of those who, like me, can easily be led astray (curiosity does have consequences).

    I am a sinner, and not purposely so. Perhaps “survivor” would be more apt. I have done what I needed to do.

    I am grateful, and I am ashamed.

    I am myself.

    I am a man, but more so; I am human.

    I am a possibility.

    I am many things. More importantly, I could be more.