Category Archives: Poetry

Braver-y

Funny, isn’t it? Every time I used to think of you, I would imagine someone a bit worn-down…a little helpless…someone scared, or in need…someone to rescue, I suppose. Ah, what a joy it was to see again the true you, undaunted and thriving! Reality turned out to be much more interesting than my vapid, self-serving dreams–though I shouldn’t have been surprised; I’d simply forgotten how vibrant you really were. Forgotten your magnetism and fire, forgotten your strength, forgotten the way you’d conquered the mountain we climbed together, insisting that the only help you needed was my company, in spite of the pain you’d been in–all this time, I realized, I’d only been remembering an idea of you, not a person–not something real•

Every happy moment came rushing back, then, undistorted by my past self’s sour grapes and inexperience, and I finally understood how effortless things had been. All you ever had to do to make me happy was share your own happiness–and it was so easy to make you happy! Returning your smiles, holding you, listening to you talk: all of it, easy as breathing. Far too easy, I’d thought, and even back then I knew it was stupid to want a “challenge” instead of you, knew I was being a fool, but the very last shortcoming I would have guessed was a lack of imagination. Even after you were brave enough to give me a second chance, literally spelling it out for me because you were too nervous to confess out loud, I still never suspected that it wasn’t pity I fought against when I gave you that final “no”•

All through the rest of my teenage years and well into my twenties, I didn’t realize how rare it was for love to be that easy–how rare you were. Rare and precious, shining like a jewel, small and fragile-seeming but tough as diamond. For all my ego, for all my intellect, for all that I was older than you in years, I’d been far more of a child–a child and a coward. Exaggerating my petty, harmless terrors; too scared to notice the ones pinning me down; unwilling to stick my neck out for you a single millimeter; excoriating myself for all the wrong faults. All the wrong mistakes•

Reliving any amount of our past joy was more than I should have hoped for (certainly more than I deserved, after the way I’d tossed you aside), but at least I made an effort this time. Fought for it, actually–fought harder than I’d ever fought for anything, fought even though I was afraid. Enough to earn a bit of your friendship, if not your affection. A tiny fraction of what I wanted, and over much too soon, but the few days you did grant me were still beautiful. Rare and precious and shining, like jewels•


“Let’s take a step back,” you once said, but I think what I really need to do is learn how to walk forward. Except…it’s so hard to take that first step, when the direction I most want to go is the one you’ve told me not to face: toward you. Standing where I am now, even the thought of leaving you behind for good–of forgetting my feelings the way you’d forgotten yours–is almost too painful to contemplate (…though now I’m embarrassed for calling it “pain” after you gave the same name to the trials you’ve withstood, trials far worse than this, trials I know I would not have lived through, let alone overcome). Still, I have the courage to at least look forward now, thanks to your example, and when I do I see a path–terrain even more difficult than I imagined, yet a relief, too: the answer to a riddle that’s frustrated me all my life, but now that I know where to look it’s breathtakingly clear; like reading a familiar poem and suddenly seeing, for the first time, a message that had been there all along–hidden in plain sight.

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Voces Populi

The town my family lives in has pros and cons.

On the plus side, the scenery is gorgeous. It’s a small town right below one of the tallest mountains in the country. The weather is practically always sunny, even in winter, and there are multiple lovely parks in walking distance.

A lot of the town’s business comes from tourists, so it also has a charming and vibrant main street with an unusually high concentration of coffee shops for a town its size. Really good coffee shops–there’s one in particular that sells some of the best pastries I’ve ever had, including sumptuous homemade pop-tarts.

Every resident we’ve talked to so far has been friendly and helpful, especially the staff at our kids’ school (for whom we are extremely grateful). There’s even a surprisingly large liberal and queer presence, although the town as a whole is pretty conservative–we even had our own local Pride event!

On the minus side, well…like I said, the town is pretty conservative. The district school board, for example, has officially “decreed” that there are only two genders and that they are fixed from conception, and the town’s elections skew heavily Republican. Pickups with Trump bumper stickers are everywhere.

It’s also a very long way from my office, and while the scenery helps make the drive itself bearable, it still means too much money spent on gas and not enough time spent with my family.

The weather is also something of a double-edged sword–the thin atmosphere means the summer sun can make an 80-degree day feel like 100, while the winters alternate between frigid (often snow-packed) and weirdly warm. Deer, ice, fog, and flash floods are all potential road hazards–sometimes in the same day!

On the whole it’s a lovely place to live–at least for now–and we mostly knew what we were getting into when we moved. There have only been a handful of surprises, most of them pleasant.

By far the most unexpectedly pleasant surprise has been the local newspaper, which we find stuffed in our PO box about twice a month. It’s been strangely empowering just knowing more about what’s happening in the town, political and otherwise. It’s how we found out about the local Pride event, and how we decided who to vote for in Tuesday’s election (there were three open seats on the school board).

Even more surprising than the articles, however, have been the letters to the editor.

As I said, it’s a conservative town, so the letters to the editor contain their fair share of MAGAs, transphobes, and apologists. That being said, the discourse is mostly civil, and there have been a much broader range of views than I expected. It’s been heartening, for example, to see more than one staunch conservative condemning Trump and his actions along with the liberal and moderate voices, and there are many letters that share useful information on purely local issues (like the aforementioned school board’s activities).

Most surprising of all, however, have been the letters that aren’t really about politics at all, the ones that are just about lived experiences. Emotions, thoughts, and memories shared honestly; not as rhetoric or argument, but as simple communication. Sometimes it’s a plain “thank you” or “congratulations,” other times it’s more complex, but in each case the feeling is of neighbors reaching out to each other through a sense of community, not competition, fear, or anger. Not the Voice of the People, just…people.

People, and their voices.


Voices

  I came to her when she was nineteen.
  Born on payday.
  She was to be my mother.
  Not a mother anyone would choose at the mom store.
  She fed us well, clothed us, washed our sheets.
  Beyond this, we were on our own.
  No hugs, no praise, no words of love.
  Narcissistic and rude, she was our mother.
  At Eighty-nine,
  we try to care for her, silently cursing her demands.
  Her software is worn, her coding, eroding…
  She worries, dragging her walker room to room
  never landing, confused, anxious, fidgety.
  Pausing only to read the paper.
  Our nation’s leaders are killing her.
  She is not the same. Six months ago she had hope for her grandchildren’s future…
  Now, she paces
  What will happen to my IRA? Where will I get my meals?
  Am I going to get next month’s Social Security?
  Will I need to change doctors?
  I have nothing to leave my kids.
  I’ve worked so hard. Do you know how hard I worked?
  Yes, Mom, I know.
  Her mind clogged with the failing schemes of a madman.
  There is nothing we can say to ease this panic.
  Despite all, she is ours, and we try to offer peace.
  I wonder how many of our elderly men, women, veterans…
  The greatest generation will die with heavy hearts.
  No longer knowing if this democracy will survive.

– Tricia Tennesen

Published May 2025

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My Top Ten Rains

“Rain is a very special blessing,” my mother says. Even when I was little, she’d already been saying it to my sister and me for as long as I could remember. Just as my grandmother had said it to her, when my mother was not my mother but only herself, in the dry Texas summers of her own childhood. Eons ago and continents away, as children reckon these things.

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Irretraceable

(I had an epiphany a little while ago that I’ve been struggling to articulate. I consider this “Attempt 1;” I expect there’ll be more.)


The past is a line
The future is a fractal
Their paths never touch

But a fractal’s path
Can be everywhere at once
Passing through all points

You can’t walk backwards
But the path in front of you
Has limitless reach

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Absent Mind

Getting real sick of feeling like a shell. Not empty, exactly: all my parts are still here, still have weight and feeling and motion and thought. It’s just that I’ve gone missing.

When the lights are on, but nobody’s home, is there a word for how the home feels?

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Massive Damage

My body hurts. That’s the trouble with making yourself vulnerable: it leaves you vulnerable. Who knew?

I suppose grief is like exercise, in that way. It leaves you sore and exhausted, and too much will destroy you. But if you can push through the pain without injury, if you can embrace it and let it flow through you instead of flinching away, you’ll come out stronger in the end.

I think the muscle grief exercises is the heart.

Longer post tomorrow. Can’t promise it will be good. Dear readers, I apologize, but you may have to indulge me a little. Thank you for your patience. I love you (all three of you) very much.

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is

It’s the voice of the child who calls the emperor naked,
Of course.

But it’s the voice of the child who calls clouds pretty,
And dead birds sad,
As well.

It’s the patron of the woman catching a trickle of water in her open mouth
As she dies of thirst,
And of the woman who swipes right.

It’s the mountain climber’s, too–
At least, until falling–
And the man who dreams of flying begs its favor.

But the first man to fly knows
It is deaf to prayer,
And blind to need.

The preacher at the pulpit calls it her teacher,
But the sole pupil hearing its lesson is the old man in the back,
Doubting his faith.

The carpenter, when they build, is its employer
Though it never earns a dime.

The gambler has looked in its eyes a thousand times,
Courted it,
Cursed it,
Worshipped it,
Yet doesn’t recognize its face.

The greedy may scorn and disown it,
And the demagogue mask it,
Contort it,
Flay it and stuff straw into the empty skin
(Then bow and scrape to the puppet while condemning its bloody remains for a monster),
Yet all the wealth and power they covet is granted
Solely at its pleasure.

How do you know it?

You say, perhaps:
    Like a lover knows their mate
Or
    Like your secrets know your friend
Or even
    Like a captive knows her jailor

No, that’s wrong:

You know it like a mill knows the river,
Like a kite knows the wind,
Like roots know soil.

What is it?

Yes, that’s right: what is it?

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Fire

If you play with fire, sooner or later you’re going to get burned. The moral: stay away from fire.


When you light a fire, you can get burned. The moral: be careful with fire.


While cooking with fire, sometimes you get burned. The moral: some pain is unavoidable.


Some things burned by fire get cooked. The moral: not all destruction is bad.


Stop fire from spreading, feed it, it keeps you warm. Moral: some dangers can be tamed.


Pretty. Warm. Too much warmth is pain. Too much beauty spreads, kills. Learn: pleasant and safe are not the same.


…What is that?

Hot, bright, filled with color, dancing and alive, angry and lifeless, consuming and alluring and terrifying and pure. What is it?

Beautiful. What is it?

What is this?

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Better Than Perfect

(to the tune of “Your Reality” from Doki Doki Literature Club)

[Verse 1]

Here I stare at a screen that is white and clean, and it’s mocking me

How can I turn the thoughts running through my head to reality

[Chorus]

The keyboard sits here, indifferent and silent

Just move your hand, write the way into your heart

Fit all your thoughts into place, build them up tall

Rough and unmortared, but it’s still standing strong

Rough and unmortared, but it’s still standing strong

[Verse 2]

I admit, that this wall that I’ve cobbled together’s a bit ugly

Stones hacked out of the bed of the quarry in my mind unthinkingly

[Chorus]

“It’s not done,” I say in reassurance

There’s lots to do before it will be complete

There’s holes and cracks where the wind gusts right through it

But perfect walls won’t block any wind at all

Since they never leave your head

Demolish perfect with real

Build beautiful

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Talking Into the Abyss

The abyss’ gaze is unnerving, I admit

But it is a very good listener

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