Tuesday, February 17, 2026

Long Ago and Far Away

In the pictures, I’m smiling,

My face deeply tanned,

Surrounded by friends

In a faraway land.

 

A summer in Israel,

Without any cares,

To spend meeting people

At work picking pears.

 

We woke at 4:30

And, after a meal,

We boarded the trucks;

Oh, that life did appeal!

 

So different from all

That I knew from before.

To sweat in the orchards

Felt not like a chore

 

But like an adventure,

To be there among

Others on their own journeys,

All carefree and young.

Monday, February 16, 2026

My Morning Coffee

I drink two cups of coffee

With my breakfast every day.

It must be black and steaming hot

And perked the old-time way.

 

So I was pleasantly surprised

To read my morning drink

May cause my chances of decline

(That’s cognitive!) to shrink.

 

Dementia’s always frightened me;

It hit my mom quite young

And naturally, to worries

Of that nature, I have clung.

 

Yet now, at least, my caffeine fix

Might make a little dent

In fighting off dementia,

Though that wasn’t my intent.

Sunday, February 15, 2026

Such Hype

When, oh when, will people learn

To not create such hype

That might make someone crash and burn

With reason, then, to gripe?

 

At the Olympics, all the eyes

Were focused to behold

The skaters meant to grab the prize

Which, naturally, was gold.

 

The ice dance leaders did their best,

Their program filled with magic.

The judges, though, were more impressed

With others, not quite tragic

 

Yet disappointing, since the world

Expected gold success.

The way they glided, jumped and twirled

Meant silver caused distress.

 

The competition for the men

Was even worse than that,

For all the hype exploded when

The leader’s skate fell flat.

 

The pressure facing athletes there

Must mess with all their heads.

What they don’t need is extra glare

To rip their nerves to shreds.

Saturday, February 14, 2026

Valentine Hearts

The old silphium plant,

Found in ancient Cyrene,

Had some qualities Google

Brought up on my screen.

 

Seems its seed pod was used

To increase certain pleasures

And was thereby considered

Among Nature’s treasures.

 

Now this seed pod was shaped

Like a Valentine heart

And that may be how

Valentine’s Day got its start.

 

Or perhaps that’s a tale

Or an out-and-out lie,

Manufactured and shown

By some sneaky A.I.

 

But no matter the origin,

Hope your heart’s full,

Regardless of if

You believe in this bull.

Friday, February 13, 2026

Before Amazon

Think of your life

Before Amazon came.

At gift-giving time,

You had no one to blame 


If the present you purchased 

For a certain date 

Wasn’t mailed out in time

And arrived much too late.


It was all on your shoulders -

The shopping, the wrapping;

Too bad if the calendar

Caught you out napping.


Now you click on the site 

And you order away

With your gift, in a day or two,

Well on its way.


Impersonal? Yes,

But it gets to the door

Without much of the hassle

You dealt with before.


An occasional gift

Sent in old-fashioned style

Makes me marvel that someone

Went that extra mile.






Thursday, February 12, 2026

Screen Saver

My husband, who wanted a change

On his phone, thought that he would arrange

For a different Van Gogh

Since, as screen savers go,

Such a choice isn’t really that strange.

 

So he searched for some art to replace

What he had and to fill up that space

And what came into view

Was so lovely, he knew

It was something that he could embrace.

 

When he showed it to me and our son,

Right away certain doubts had begun,

For the question was raised

After one real quick gaze*

If the work was one Van Gogh had done.

 

The Museum (Van Gogh) did reply

To my husband’s request, with a sigh.

What you’ve sent us, alas,

No inspection would pass

For it isn’t Van Gogh, but A.I.

 

*by my son – I was as clueless as my husband!

Wednesday, February 11, 2026

No One to Ask

My brother and I, reminiscing,

Realized we’ve an impossible task,

For as we’ve gotten older, with facts that we lack,

There is nobody left we can ask…

 

Like the age that our grandparents lived to

Or the circumstance when each one passed.

We each had our thoughts but they didn’t line up,

From the mem’ries we both have amassed.

 

There are records and photos and treasures

Which attest to important events,

But the questions which no one can answer

Will forever be kept in suspense.