Resolutions to be made
Saddles to be ridden
Flowers to be saved
Secrets to be hidden
–Victoria Emmons, copyright 2016
Resolutions to be made
Saddles to be ridden
Flowers to be saved
Secrets to be hidden
–Victoria Emmons, copyright 2016
A gift of mud
From a dear friend
Turns my head
In a new direction
Not just any mud,
Of course, since
This mud traveled
Long distances
Through customs
Weighting down an
Already heavy suitcase
Of trinkets and souvenirs
This mud revered
By millions over time
Anecdote for pain
Soothing an ache or two
And now mine
To ease the hurt
Of an aging body
And cloudy mind
The mud draws me
Closer again
Pulls me toward
The clear water
Falls tumble
Over the edge
Like so many
Nights I remember
The sound of the flow
As it eased his pain
Warmth the only remedy
For his affliction
All these years
I could not go
Near the water
Or the memories
Of that huge tub
Filled with pain
And agony
Loneliness and sorrow
At night I hear
The faucet running still
As it was those dark
And deadly nights
Awakening me with
The reality of a cancer
Poisoning life as
We once knew it
The mud equals
Renewal and healing
Fifteen to twenty minutes
Is all it promises
Skin renewed, soft
Gentle kindness
Rinsed away in
Warm waters
I can do this
My aging flesh
Will accept the hot
Pool beneath me
No longer must I hide
From the bathtub of death
When life beckons
Me to play
Ironic somehow
The birth of
This renewal mud
The Dead Sea
—Victoria Emmons © 2015
Found in more than a thousand places
Hope takes on so many faces.
Will I pass my science test?
Does my father think I’m best?
Will this baby stay alive to
Live nine months and always thrive?
Will the judge be kind to me
Even I when I try to flee?
Will this flower bloom in red
Or only bloom inside my head?
Will I find sweet Allie dog
Lost today amidst the fog?
Will I finish this long race
And, win or lose, accept my place?
Will my love be always there
Even when I need his care?
Will Mom live another day
To smile with me, to laugh and play?
I hope for this, I hope for that
I hope I look good in this new hat.
Hope takes on another face
Hope I keep up this grueling pace.
—Victoria Emmons © 2015
Black steam churns and spits
From every crevice of the old maid
Her body worn with travel
Soaked with time and stories to tell
She coughs with every breath
Attempting to please the crowd
Those who decry her age
Love her no matter what
Each chug makes her believe
She can, she can, she can
She thinks she can and she will
Fly down the rails yet again
—Victoria Emmons ©2015
Fast and furious
Speed toward infinity
Ripe for castigation
Or maybe scintillation
Leap into the abyss
All for just one kiss
–Victoria Emmons, ©2012
Love to no avail
like a salmon that
swims upstream
seeking eternity
Ever chasing
the golden ring
of life to
self-sustain
Leaping hurdles
and barriers
along the way
to nirvana
A journey that
never ends for
even once found
is often lost
–Victoria Emmons © 2014
Reach for the trigger
Save her from harm
Holster unbuckled
Sound the alarm
Mischief and pleasure
Too many years
Changed her demeanor
Causing the tears
How to override
Fate such as this
Once we were friends
Sharing such bliss
Now she is colder
Ice in her veins
Blame her disease state
Slapping the chains
Tight around her wrists
Cops everywhere
The flashing red lights
People who stare
This sad girl in need
Cries for rescue
Wants love in her life
As we all do
No crime has happened
As it appears
Why do they take her
Away for two years
Reprogram her days
And sleepless nights
Remove the cocaine
Assure no flights
New thoughts emerge
Bright meanings land
She’ll soon discover
The shifting sand
–Victoria Emmons, © 2014
Rescue me, mon ami,
from the debris of life
save me from the
threads that weave
my heart to yours
I need saving now and then
my head is tired and
my body aches for you
to save me some day
on your white horse
I’m not your Fairy Godmother
flying in and out of your life
to save you from yourself
I carry no magic wand
to make it all better
I can only offer one gift
my eternal love for you
wretched soul that you are
so rescue me, mon amour,
save me from myself
–by Victoria Emmons, © 2014
How much is enough
To show her you care
How many times
must you weep
How much is enough
For a father to say
He loves his child
More than life itself
How much is enough
For a daughter to hear
That her papa is grieving
Her loss from his world
How much is enough
To tell her you love her
And kiss her brow
As tears wet her cheek
How much is enough
To say you regret
The pain and the prison
That one moment caused
How much is enough
For peace to restore
And pride to erase
The memory of a face
–Victoria Emmons, © 2014