30 Poems for National Poetry Month: Day 10
April 10, 2013
I awake at 4:30 AM
To the sound of a bird
I can’t identify by song.
He teases me from inside
The magnolia just off our deck.
In the predawn light,
I can’t spot him among the buds.
I think of Issa:
“Singing since morning
Skylark, your throat
Is parched.”
Climbing back into bed,
I see you sleeping.
So beautiful in the early light.
My happiness is anything
But average.
–Scott Edward Anderson
30 Poems for National Poetry Month: Day 9
April 9, 2013
I worry that my happiness
Will get in the way of my poetry.
Whoever heard of a happy poet?
We’re all supposed to be manic
Depressives or alcoholics.
We have to suffer for our Art
Or it ain’t “Art” — right?
I worry, too, that I’m boring
My readers with all these love
Poems or that it seems
Over-the-top, that no one
Will believe a man can be
THAT much in love,
When these are among
The most honest poems
I’ve ever written. And,
Yes, I AM that much in love.
Worry, too, I can’t sustain
Such joy and I’m setting myself
Up for a big fall. I worry…
Nah, I’ve given up worrying.
Happiness is my choice,
And I’m happy with it.
–Scott Edward Anderson
30 Poems for National Poetry Month: Day 8
April 8, 2013
Here is my poem for Day 8 of National Poetry Month:
“So this is what it’s like without kids,”
Your son observes when he stops by
To pick up his computer on his way
Back to his dad’s crosstown apartment.
Adult music, a gourmet dinner eaten,
Poached pears in pomegranate juice.
Romance in the air.
Yeah, this is what it’s like without our kids.
We revel in these moments,
Alone together.
But these are only a part of our flowering.
Those nights more frenetic, with your kids
Or mine…or the whole six-pack together
In full flourish, are no less remarkable.
Extraordinary, actually.
And pieces of what we are building together:
The life that we want to live,
With intention and authenticity,
And, yes, equal parts messiness and grace.
–Scott Edward Anderson
30 Poems for National Poetry Month: Day 7
April 7, 2013
When I saw your familiar face
In the picture I painted almost 30 years ago,
I understood Frost’s delight
And “surprise of remembering
Something I didn’t know I knew.”
Had I really been searching for you
In all my days and dreams?
It was the same feeling of recognition
I had twice when we met:
For the first time in that Philly train station,
And from across the room a year later,
As I was about to go on stage in New York.
I didn’t know what it was I recognized,
Or how it would change my life.
But “something I didn’t know I knew,”
Became something I didn’t know
I needed in my life, and then
Something I couldn’t live without
In every dream, and every night, and every day.
–Scott Edward Anderson
30 Poems for National Poetry Month: Day 6
April 6, 2013
Here is my poem for Day 6 (or morning six, as it were…):
“Freedom’s just another word
For nothing left to lose,”
As it goes in that old
Kris Kristofferson song.
But we lose something
Every day, free or chained–
Cells, skin, hair, memories.
Time goes too, the sparrows
Mark it outside our window,
The mourning doves coo
And whisper, their throats
Parted by the morning mist.
We rise slowly on mornings
We’re alone together; infrequent
As those days may be.
Our bed loosing its grip
Ever so reluctantly.
“I ache to be in your hold,”
You wrote in a dream.
My poetess of sleep.
–Scott Edward Anderson
30 Poems for National Poetry Month: Day 5
April 5, 2013
Here is my Day 5 poem for National Poetry Month:
Remember that Adrienne Rich poem
About falling in love at middle age?
The one where she talks about wanting
“To know even our limits.”
And where weeks stand in for years
Of not knowing one another.
Every day I’m convinced
That you are more beautiful
In your maturity, with your inner
Core more centered, than you
Could have been in your twenties.
(I am a better man now, too.)
And the time we do have can’t be
Wasted over what might have been,
Or how little of it there is.
We have what we have,
Which is a little like saying,
“It is what it is.”
Forget Manhattan
Or Berlin–
Let’s Take Brooklyn
And begin the beguine.
30 Poems for National Poetry Month: Day 4
April 4, 2013
“Happiness is a choice,”
Says my friend Jack.
Whether you choose
To focus on the love
Expressed or the flaws
Hinted at; that’s your choice.
(Okay, you snore.
Is that enough?)
I choose to focus
On thriving, after so long
Languishing. Now
That I have found
The jewel in the crescent
Moon that makes disappear
The flaws in the bezel of my being.
–Scott Edward Anderson
30 Poems for National Poetry Month: Day 3
April 3, 2013
Here’s my Day 3 poem for National Poetry Month, which I wrote during a bout with insomnia in the wee hours of the morning:
Love is never perfect
And neither are you and me.
You don’t walk on water;
I prefer to swim under.
And there is nothing
Over my eyes, neither
Gauzy nor hued.
I see your flaws
And raise them with mine.
And I love you,
Even in your imperfections,
Which I won’t enumerate here.
And even with all mine. (Ditto.)
That’s real love, baby.
Get used to it. It’s yours
If you want it–
–Scott Edward Anderson
30 Poems for National Poetry Month: Day One & Two
April 2, 2013
The challenge is to write a poem every day for National Poetry Month.
I’ve never cared for these daily, quick-writ challenges, preferring to let a poem mull and steep rather than be cast onto the page too quickly like a gambler shooting dice out of a cup.
But, yesterday, sitting in Bryant Park eating my lunch, I was inspired to give it a go. And then again this morning on the subway heading from Brooklyn into Manhattan.
So, here are my first two entries:
1
April Fools the fool that fools
With the sun on the first day
Of baseball season.
They’ve laid new grass down
On the lawn at Bryant Park.
Sign reading: “Lawn Closed”–
Where just a month ago
There was a skating rink.
“The new sod is establishing
Its roots.”
2
Our blended family whorled
Back from Disney World,
Dispersed to their other
Homes, to come together
Later in this month of poetry.
Our fantasy become reality.
–Scott Edward Anderson




