Sunday, July 13, 2025

A Waiting Game

Life between the highs and lows

Is stable, or one would suppose,

Yet that might not be true at all –

When high, you’re waiting for the fall.

 

And naturally, when you are low,

There is no way for you to know

How long until your saddened state

Will vanish, so again you wait.

 

So life becomes a waiting game.

If being stable is your aim,

When on a high, I’d answer hah!

When low, more likely, I’d say bah!

Saturday, July 12, 2025

Regional Theater

Living in New York, I see

A lot of Broadway shows

And most of them have stars on stage

That everybody knows.

 

Yet often in the lesser roles

Are actors out to make

The audience acknowledge them –

To earn that hoped-for break.

 

In local theaters, all the cast

Performs from that same place,

While dreaming that the world will know

Their name or voice or face.

 

And thanks to that, they try their best

And give it all they’ve got,

Providing all who watch them

With a show they’ll like a lot.

Friday, July 11, 2025

Sudden

With a snap of the fingers,

The drop of a hat,

A life can be altered

And that will be that.

 

Though positive changes

May happen that way,

It’s mostly the bad things

That heavily weigh.

 

For something that’s sudden

That no one expected

Casts ripples of grief

To each person affected.

 

Yet life must go on

In an alternate way,

Though survivors remember

The terrible day

 

That divides all their lives

Into two equal parts –

The before and the after,

When sufferance starts.

Thursday, July 10, 2025

Consequences

Some events throughout our lives

Have consequences that

Reverberate for years and years,

No matter where we’re at.

 

A childhood trauma or a jab

That cut us to the quick,

Emotional or physical;

A hurt that seemed to stick.

 

Or else an injury incurred

To leave a lasting scar

Or the remnants of an illness

Which hangs on in ways bizarre.

 

There’s not way to know just what

Will have a permanent effect

And at times we may react to what

We never would suspect.

 

The only thing that we can do

When looking to the past

Is to realize we are stuck for good

With what the die has cast.

Wednesday, July 9, 2025

Meeting Old Friends

When you meet with old friends

After months, even years,

There is comfort in having

No need to switch gears.

 

For the groundwork’s been set

And the basics are known,

So there’s just catching up –

How the grandkids have grown!

 

But most likely you’ll talk

About health or its lack

And the surgeries done

On the hips, knees or back.

 

There’ll be notes to compare

About travel and shows

And each exercise class

And acquaintances’ woes.

 

Still, it’s lovely to spend

Time together again.

There should be a repeat,

But who knows where or when.

Tuesday, July 8, 2025

I Couldn't Live

I couldn’t live without A/C

Though people all through history

Made do with fans or else before,

They sweated through the clothes they wore.

 

I’d hate to live without my phone;

Attached to it I’ve somehow grown

Though I’ve survived, let’s not forget,

When it was not invented yet.

 

I wouldn’t want to live without

The wheels that take me all about,

For without car or bus or train,

I’d feel so stuck I’d just complain.

 

I’m glad I never had to live

Without appliances that give

The means to keep us clean and fed,

Allowing us to get ahead.

 

I’m grateful that these things exist

Though we can’t know what we’ll have missed

By living in this current age

Before the future turns the page.

Monday, July 7, 2025

When to Replace

When to replace something 

Which will expire

Is a question all homeowners face.

Is it better to wait 

‘Til a problem comes up

In the item you need to replace…


Or perhaps it makes sense,

When that item is old,

To just ditch it and buy something new.

If it works but you’ve had it

A really long time, then

You know what’s the right thing to do.


It’s a gamble to hope that 

Your item will last 

For if suddenly, it starts to break,

You must deal with the consequence

And chalk it up

To a classic homeowner’s mistake.