ON THIS FIRST DAY

 

ON THIS FIRST DAY


               Up,

and in the butterscotch chair

while coffee brews. I begin

reading A Year with Bonhoeffer,--

the daily meditations by turning

back to January 1–2025:

God becomes human, a real human being,

on this first day. I began this journey

October 12, when Steve gave us

both the book. We had been driving

to Ellensburg each week, studying DB’s

Discipleship—his work on the Beatitudes

re-opening the hunger that can’t be taught,

blessed are those,--what had broke me open

in the story, broke me again in the words.

Sweet with the practice of early rising,

the dark listen through other ears. Music

available to all at no cost. It’s a new time

again. One with destructive empathy,

de-constructing one’s own feelings.

God wants me to be human too. On this

first day, bird feeders full of thistles

for the finches, God leads us

into absurdity. What am I doing

with this rich kid, newly arrived

from the beaches of Barcelona?

How is it that God sounds so much

like my mother's cry. Her song carries,

crossing the shallow seas of North Dakota.


Jim Bodeen

1-3 January 2025

THE AMERICAN GOLDFINCH

 

THE AMERICAN GOLDFINCH


            --for D. P. at 17


is the songbird you fill the feeder

full of thistles for, Dee. This morning

you’re 17, and finches sing

Tsii, tsi, tsi, tsit, for you. Maybe


you’re making pizzas today,

working your shift at Mod Pizza,--

maybe right now, you’re getting ready

for work, maybe checking messages


on your phone from friends singing

for you. When they call, sing back.

Tell them you like thistles, dandelions,

small twigs. Tell them you like flowers,


lots of flowers, purple ones.

Purple ones with yellow centers.

You’re 17. Give this day to yourself.

Hey, this day to find out again, what it’s like!


Love you. Gpa

27 December 2024

ASPARAGUS SETACEUS

 ASPARAGUS SETACEUS


            [Poem in Karen’s Christmas Stocking]


IS NOT, is not, a stocking

stuffer, and it’s not a fern either,


even though Wilco

will make you think so.


It is related to the asparagus,

claimed also by the lily


family. Family stockings

hung on the fireplace make one


believe in socks hung empty

by a fire place during Advent.


It’s Christmas Eve, Karen

and my gifts for you, promise


nothing, they’re as useless

as ever. This uselessness


that makes me a beginner

is the gift inside the stocking--


no holes in these toes--

the beginner knows better


than those more knowing--

the beginner is always


beginning. You’re napping

and I’m online learning how


to care for a fern that is not

a fern, wispy in a window sill


or bathroom, liking light

and water, but not too much,


one from South Africa, now

all over the place. If I can


get this right, the plant goes

to the window sill. This poem


goes in the stocking

with all my searching love.


Love, Jim

Christmas Eve, 2024

20 DECEMBER 2024

 















20 DECEMBER 2024


        0130 Hours


Sensing she’s awake,

I ask her,

                    How are you doing?


I’m not sleeping. I’m OK.


I get up to pee.


My dry, scratchy eyes are good.

I’m learning how to take daily care,

morning and night.

I feel good in my eyes.


Take care for others. For her breath is for you.


First person pronouns to love her with.


How’s the right knee?

Better with less walking.


Freak occurrences and improbable coincidences.


Loose paragraphs half-attached


Breathing into the listening



Jim Bodeen

20 December 2024

ANOTHER ANNIVERSARY POEM

 

ANOTHER ANNIVERSARY POEM


Writing in the pew, after worship,

Bell Choir practicing, each pew draped

with handmade quilts sewn during the year,

Bart’s directing choir,

an artist himself, jazz pianist,

Karen is on the near end

closest to where I sit. Next Sunday

they will ring for the congregation.

They’re practicing, O Come, O Come,


Emmanuel. God with us in the pew.

It’s my dad’s middle name, never

used by him, but he could sign the E

with a flourish. Karen plays four bells

at the same time—G, A, A flat, B flat.

They’re talking back and forth now.

Bart is laughing. My Notebook’s open, along

with Bonhoeffer’s, Cost of Discipleship.

I’m three weeks living with his work


on the Beatitudes. I’ll never finish.

Blessed are the merciful. [May I die,

right here, Lord?] For they shall receive

mercy. Jesus speaking to his disciples,

Bonhoeffer reminds us. They have

renounced their own dignity. Bonhoeffer's

27 years old writing this. The same age

as Jimi* and Janis when they died.

The year is 1933. Bonhoeffer will be


hanged in 1945, at the age of 39,

the same age as Flannery O’Connor,

Martin Luther King, Jr., and Malcolm.

It will be spring right before Allied

Liberation. The day will be the 9th

of April, sharing the same day

as my mother’s birthday. They’re

ringing again, the bells, Rejoice!

Rejoice! Bell ringers throwing


out the sounds with their arms.

The disciples have wed themselves

to the poor, the stranger, and the wronged.

They wear the clothes of shame

and dishonor. This is the beatitude,

great gift, given to me by my mother,

and I have passed it on to my children

who have wrapped others in mercy

for more than half a century. It’s


too much. I imagine my children

as bell ringers. Cowering before

their courage, I often find myself unable

to praise. I hear them most clearly

in Cannonball Adderley’s great

song, Mercy, released in 1964,

written by Joe Zawinul, Adderley’s

piano player—Austrian, by the way,

who often had to ride hidden


in the car driving in the South

during Jim Crow because everybody

but Ziwinul was black. Mercy, mercy, mercy,

how Adderley introduces the song. Often times

we’re not ready for adversity, he says,

Zawinul playing in the background.

Returning to hear the song on Youtube

over the years, is how I memorized

Adderley’s words, and his speaking


voice, repeating, Mercy, mercy, mercy.

Rhyme in adversity. Its marriage to trouble.

One time at Thanksgiving my sister drops

a bowl of olives, crying, Oh mercy me.

A granddaughter asks her why she said that.

She says, We laugh so we don’t have

to cry, Baby. Mercy. It’s the joke that hides

our treasure. The way Jesus says, Price paid.

The way Karen rings four bells.



*Jimi Hendrix and Janis Joplin both died in 1970.


Jim Bodeen

24-25 November 2024












A CHILE PEPPER FOR JOE SANDERS, AND ONE MORE FOR BOB

 

A CHILE PEPPER FOR JOE SANDERS


                --for Joe and Bob Sanders


0253 hours

16 November 2024


Karen looks at the clock

and says, I can’t sleep.


Joe Sanders is dead.

A family member gone.


He died in his sleep.

But. Yes. I know.


The perfect death. Our

emptiness, a part


of us. Karen remembers

the last time we saw him


on the 4th of July. Joe

loved those fire crackers


almost as much as Joe

loved buying them. Not


as much as his black pickup,

shoveling neighbors’ driveways


and his hot tub—and barbecue.

A consciousness filled with cariño


helps us choose awesome, Father

Boyle says. Joe poured black


pepper on salad, on pasta,

until it looked like gravel


on gravel road. Joe Sanders

loved his brother Bob’s fresh-


made rolls, and would come

to the house early. Joe played


baseball, and had a bad knee.

He collected stamps, Joe did,


and delivered the mail. Joe

was a sailor who could talk ports


and California beaches. A Catholic,

Joe would worship with the Lutherans


and leave before taking Communion.

Belonging is always the uncounted


score in Joe’s cribbage game,

and Joe loved cribbage. Somehow


we lost that question. That conversation

never had a chance to return. Joy


was matter-of-fact with Joe

as he picked up the Serrano Chile


from his plate. God in that Serrano

Chile was never in doubt.



Jim Bodeen

18 November 2024



LINES FOR BOB DURING THE DAYS

AFTER HIS BROTHER DIES


Bob, it’s through knowing Joe

I came to know you in your deepest story.


Knowing you through family is what I love most.


After your marriage to our daughter--


you two firecrackers coming back

from the fireworks stand in Moxee

on the 4th of July.


                Reading the second

                Beatitude today,

                Sorrow Bearer,

                Holding it, staying

                with it, carrying it,


Blessed are they who mourn

for they shall be comforted,


how I walk with you, Bob,


Being with the suffering,

being suffering,


                    A Jesus man


Into the surf-mix-wet-week

where we all of us,

salted and assaulted

in our weakness

become blessings



Love,

Dad

22 November 2024

AS I TURN THEN TO KAREN,

 

AS I TURN THEN TO KAREN,


                        to receive her into the day--


click of the light from bedroom

signaling her entrance. Rain

as coffee finishes, and fire

in the fireplace. Click of coffee

cup on counter, and the twist

of plastic container, as Karen

reaches inside for two

biscottis. The pouring of her

coffee, and, as she walks

to her chair, preparing to sit,

first her breath, followed

by the cushions, rustling fabric,

receiving her body. Her mouth

hollows itself, enlarging

into its own sound chamber,

between echo and whistle,

as she sips, and tastes, the coffee.

We’ve not yet said

Good morning to each other,

each of us acknowledging

what is a beatitude,

this sudden explosion of song,

this ancient blessingway.


Jim

20 November 2024