The Butterfly’s Tail Flickers In Blue Ember   1 comment

Gray Hairstreak on Desert Marigold — Image by kenne

So small—

and yet the marigold bends

as if honored.

The butterfly’s tail

flickers a blue ember.

I have lived long enough

to know

that such brightness

arrives without warning

and leaves the same way.

Still, it is here.

That is enough.

— kenne

Kenne David’s Half-Marathon At 51   Leave a comment

A group of runners participating in a race, wearing colorful athletic gear and bib numbers, with one runner holding a pacing sign that indicates a two-hour finish time.

This was Dave’s first half-marathon, with the goal of running the distance in two hours or less.
The race organizers provided pacesetters, so Dave began his half-marathon staying with the 2:00 hour pacesetter.

A man wearing a red shirt and bright yellow shorts runs along a paved path in a park, with cars parked in the background and trees lining the area.

About halfway through the race, he picked up his pace, running the race in 1:55.20.

Finish Line

A man with a beard and a cap smiling while sitting on the back of a truck, wearing a medal and colorful athletic clothing.

Sitting on his tailgate at the end of the race.
Mission Accomplished.

Shoes on pavement,
a metronome of doubt.
Still, the body insists—
one more mile
into light.

I created the blog posting using the photos Dave provided. I was only there vicariously.

#######

AFTER THOUGHT

The friend who asked Dave to run the half-marathon with him didn’t show up.

Then and How   1 comment

Then—

I thought the mountain

was something to climb.

Now—

I sit and let it

enter my breathing.

What changed?

A few decades of work

tire tracks on my clothes,

children grown.

Call it life

if you need a word.

— kenne

Birdbird In Flight   2 comments

Bluebird in Flight Abstract by kenne

the bluebird

there’s a bluebird in my heart that
wants to get out
but I’m too tough for him,
I say, stay in there,I’m not going
to let anybody see
you.

there’s a bluebird in my heart that
ants to get out
but I pour whiskey on him and inhale
cigarette smoke
and the whores and the bartenders
and the grocery clerks
never know that
he’s
in there.

there’s a bluebird in my heart that
wants to get out
but I’m too tough for him,
I say, stay down, do you want to mess
me up?
you want to screw up the
works?
you want to blow my book sales in
Europe?

there’s a bluebird in my heart that
wants to get out
but I’m too clever, I only let him out
at night sometimes
when everybody’s asleep.
I say, I know that you’re there,
so don’t be
sad.

then I put him back,
but he’s singing a little
in there, I haven’t quite let him
die
and we sleep together like
that
with our
secret pact
and it’s nice enough to
make a man
weep, but I don’t
weep…
do you?

— Charles Bukowski

Cooper’s Hawk   6 comments

Cooper’s Hawk in the Patio Olive Tree  Near the Bird Feeder– Image by kenne

The feeder is our promise to small lives.

The hawk is the answer we cannot control.

When he drops—swift, inevitable—

the air itself seems to close.

Afterward, the patio is ordinary again,

except for the silence that lingers. 

— kenne

Natures Synbolism   Leave a comment

Saguaro Sunrise — Image by kenne

Saguaro cactus at sunrise—
you say endurance,
beauty against all odds.
I see a drunk saint
full of needles
hoarding water like secrets.
The sun bleeds out behind it
without apology.
If there’s a lesson there,
it’s that even the harshest thing
knows how to bloom
when it has to.

— kenne

Props, Not A Habit   Leave a comment

On the Outer Banks of North Carolina

I keep the cigar lit

long enough to feel dangerous.

The whiskey glows

like a small sunset

I can hold.

But when the glass is empty

and the scene is still there,

I know—

it was always theater.

— kenne

The Evening Works In Grayscale   Leave a comment

Black and White Sunset — Image by kenne

Evening works in grayscale.

The mountains turn honest,

stripped of their bright talk.

The sun lowers itself

behind the ridge—

another shift done,

another mark made clean.

— kenne

Sonoran Desert Storm   1 comment

Cactus Wren Waits for the Dust from a Desert Storm to Move On — Image by kenne

Morning haze rolls in

like a tired excuse.

The desert listens,

doesn’t argue,

lets it pass.

— kenne

Witnessing Pain and Suffering   3 comments

Mother In Hospice (08/26/06)

Every photograph of suffering

proposes a contract:

you may look,

but you must not

turn away too quickly.

The stages of pain—

shock, endurance, vacancy—

are flattened into a single frame.

Time is arrested,

yet the body continues

beyond the border

of the image.

— kenne

Ace of Spades   2 comments

Male Phainopepla — Image by kenne

He is so high in the mesquite
I must squint—
An ace of spades caught in thorns.

Yet I feel the small red spark
of his eye
fasten to me.

The branch yields, does not surrender.
My grandmother said
real strength makes no announcement;
it simply remains.

He falls—
a swift stroke of black—
and rises again
to the same waiting limb.

Nothing altered, it seems.

But the desert keeps a breath
between his leaving and return,
and in that held silence
my heart shifts,
quiet as sand
after the wind.

— kenne

Hazy Morning   Leave a comment


Hazy Morning Sun In Sabino Canyon — Silhouette Image by kenne

Saguaro cutouts
against a milky sun—
even the shadows
drink their coffee slow
out here.

— kenne

Armory Park ICE Demonstration   Leave a comment

Abolish ICE Demonstration In Armory Park (07/01/18) — Image by kenne

There is something about grass in Tucson—

it feels like a miracle you can sit on.

We stood on that miracle,

raising our voices.

Armory Park once trained soldiers.

That day,

it trained witnesses.

A little boy climbed

up into a jacaranda tree

and shouted a chant down at us,

his voice high and fearless.

We answered him.

Because every movement begins

with someone small enough

to believe it might work.

— kenne

 

Spirit Into Matter   2 comments

Arches National Park Image by kenne

We persist in calling spirit invisible,
as though visibility were vulgar.
But what is more arrogant
than refusing incarnation?
Matter is not the enemy of meaning—
it is meaning slowed down enough to be examined.

— kenne

Kenne David and Katie On Galveston Beach   Leave a comment

Kenne David and Katie on Galveston Beach — Image by kenne

Galveston still has that beach.
Kids probably still run it raw.
But Kenne and Katie grew up—
that’s the real crime.
You don’t notice it happening.
One day you’re just standing there
remembering sand
and wishing you’d paid better attention. 

— kenne