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Don Bouchard Apr 2016
Years

The early years move
Snail-paced, sheltered, slow.

Six years on,
School begins,
The making of friends,
The knowledge of books,
The beginnings of "Why?"
Ten, and no going back again
Thirteen, and the problem of sexuality
Fifteen, first crush, first kiss;
Sixteen, and a broken heart....
Eighteen, college, dorms, and finding my way
Nineteen, and love is found, promises made
By passion-bellowed lungs...
Twenty, almost twenty-one, two of us are one;
Twenty-two, and we are three;
Twenty-three, and we are four;
Twenty-four, degree in hand, a teacher stands;
Twenty-six, the boy arrives to make us five;
Twenty-seven, and to the ranch;
Thirty, back to the northern classroom;
Thirty-two, and the little girl joins us at the valley school,
And we are six;
Thirty-three, and my second father passes;
Forty-four, and Minnesota calls us;
Fifty-two, my father passes;
Speeding now,
The years once were molasses...
Don Bouchard Apr 2016
Acid notes have just begun;
When the mellowness is gone,
Acrid memories linger on.

Embrace the rush into unknowns,
Treasure pleasure's fleeting tones,
Know sorrows come when they are gone.

Pile up the dulcet memories;
In summer load your treasuries;
Lay up the sweetnesses of life
To feast upon in coming strife.
Pensive Moments.... Good Times, and Bad.
Don Bouchard Apr 2016
I have known enough of life
To speak a word on the value of love,
And the quickness of a final breath,
And the separation caused by death.

I have bent to tie a shoelace,
Been overwhelmed with realization,
That when I stand again to look,
The loved one who came to mind
Has long been buried,
Will not hear me speak,
Nor say my name.

This morning, as we readied
Ourselves for work,
I stopped to pick a thing up,
Realized the joy
Of hearing my wife's sounds:
Cooking eggs,
Running water in the sink,
Putting things away,
And felt a rush of love.

I stood and walked to her,
Kissed her on the nose.

"What was that for?"

"I was overwhelmed by love just now."
Noticing the little precious things of life...while we are still here....
Ephesians 5:14-16
Don Bouchard Apr 2016
("...Getting and spending, we lay waste our powers: Little we see in Nature that is ours...." -- W. Wordsworth)

What do I really own, and what is only on loan?
Is the stretch of road ahead of me mine;
Is the place really mine I am looking to hold,
Stamped with my God-given right and design;
Is the future I think I can see set in gold?

In the traffic of life,
Our travels must merge;
Shall I jostle and strive
Or peacefully seek to converge
With fellow travelers who surge?

We fret and we scurry; we fight and we worry;
All through our lives we compete
To claim more than the road at our feet,
Never content nor complete.
"Getting and spending, we lay waste our powers,
Little do we see in Nature that is ours.  
In a Wordsworth frame of mind today.....
http://www.bartleby.com/145/ww317.html
Don Bouchard Apr 2016
Starbucks cups of Kenya (fair trade)
Academic palaver and ennui
Interrupted by a hovering sparrow
Just outside our glassy corner
“Sparrows can’t hover”
An ornithologist told his class twenty years ago…
And here’s this sparrow,
Uneducated, I guess…
Hovers above and between us
On the other side of the glass…
Just hangs there
Maintaining for a count
One, two, three, four…
Slips down and then back up
And toward us, just above the glass,
Neatly picks a moth from the brick casing.
The helo-sparrow descends
To consume the pinched moth,
Its dusty wings
Resembling sunflower hulls
Shucked and discarded
Near bleachers after the game.
Don Bouchard Mar 2016
How does the rancher learn to dance
The annual rhythms of the land?

When do we bring the cows, bawling,
From open summer to sheltered winter pastures?
When is it time to bring the stubborn bulls
To the empty, urgent cows,
Or to remove them from contented cows,
Grown placid in the heaviness of calves?

How do we know the time
To round up the sweltering herds,
Bringing the bellering calves to brand?
Or when do we cull the frightened heifers,
Lucky in their selection, but uncertain?
When should we pare the weanlings,
And when call we the buyers?

And, when is the time for hiking forty miles
Of rusting fence,
Replacing posts,
Mending broken wire
Before the changing of pastures?

And when is the time to come to ease,
To sense the satisfaction
In seeing grazing cattle,
Tails swishing away the black flies of June,
Moving through gray-green prairie grass
On their way to cool creek water?
If I keep working on this, I'll never get it up online, so here it is.
Don Bouchard Mar 2016
We meet again;
No thunder, lightning,
Nor no rain,
But awkward,
Just the same...

Conversation turning dour,
Work complaints
Almost an hour...

Birthday wishes?

Realize a party's
Not for sighs,
Not for damning
Others' eyes,
Not a time to criticize,
Nor office lies,
Nor padding chubby thighs.

Times like this,
I realize,
It's office parties
I despise,
And pine away
For open skies.

Awkward.
Reflections on things I detest.
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