Showing posts with label Creativity. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Creativity. Show all posts

Eat a Rainbow

Eat a rainbow with one hand open
Palm up to the world
Receive this as if water poured from the mouth of God.

Eat a rainbow
Standing with your back to the terror
Letting color and light into the caverns of fear
fill the wounded places
Of mother earth a broken heart
those lost in rubble Of another's hatred

Eat a rainbow
By the side of the road
Look each person who passes you in the eye
The hawkers and the sellers of fate 
Dreamers, the mothers and the fathers
say, this soul cannot be sold

Stand in the center
Back to the darkness

Eat a rainbow

Eat a Rainbow (2nd version)

Eat a rainbow
By the side of the road
Look each person who passes you in the eye


Eat a rainbow with one hand open
Palm up to the world
Receive this
As if water poured from the mouth of God
 

Whimsy of Hope

A new year, new possibilities. Like many others, I look forward to a fresh start, a reset. In the meantime, I have been revisiting my creative writing past. I am re-engaging with a part of my life once full of poetry and inspiration.

It's not that I am not creative. I create for clients. There are articles and essays I post on various social media sites, including my blogs. However, poetry and prose have languished in my past.

2025 is up for grabs. In the United States, we have a new administration that faced challenges the first time around. The future feels uncertain.

My head is down, looking at the path I'm on and how to make the best of this one life I have been given.

"Tell me, what is it you plan to do with your one wild and precious life?" from The Summer Day by Mary Oliver

Revisiting my creative past reminds me there is the tiniest of embers that I have held safe, waiting for me to bring it back to life. There are no promises. No grand goals to write each day. No word count. There is this whimsy of hope.

Despite what swirls around me, I can activate this one phrase. One word that leads to another. I can read the past to remind me there is the possibility for more creativity to come. Maybe I will write one poem. Or a prose piece. Or I will continue with photography. I will badly draw and then add color. This ember will come to life in its own way.

Let me leave you with a line from an older prose essay I just posted: "So I am just asking, what gets you up in the morning? I mean, when your feet hit the ground, what stops you from rolling back into the bed? What makes you want to continue living?" ~ Bits & Pieces

Join me in making magic.


Sandra Lee Schubert ©All Rights Reserved, 2025 
Welcome to the writing life: Notes on life, writing, and other things.

Creative Vagabond: Transforming Ideas into Engaging Content. Articles. Courses. Blogs. E-Books. Social Media. Text Us. 347-418-1157

Full Moon Hungry

Come my love, and slip down beside me
I am full moon hungry and tonight
it is the brightest of the year

Empty of you finally after a long illness
almost took the last breath of my body 
I measure each action as victory
marking time by each 
day I wake
greet the morning
reluctantly still
after all this time
It is the moon that feeds me, moving
lambently across my breasts,
filling me with its light and grace
I will tell you when I have reclaimed my life.

Moving past the shadow of this illness,
I curl into the smallest shaft of light.
I will drink until I am full.

From the anthology: heart, 2002 The Wild Angels

Sandra Lee Schubert ©All Rights Reserved, 2025

Creative Vagabond: Transforming Ideas into Engaging Content. Articles. Courses. Blogs. E-Books. Social Media. Text Us. 347-418-1157

PhD

We talked about things, the book. I told you I could not understand what the fuss was all about. I didn't really like her writing anyway. How about the other one? The one who people think is so smart. I said, she is nice and all. But, I had a roommate who was getting her PhD who could not boil an egg or iron a shirt. I taught her all that. It's not the PhD that impresses me it is the ability to love. I said all these things, stupid things to keep talking to keep my brain alive. I've got wild beasts caught in my throat you know. I have to keep talking to let them out. Ever wondered why all those old people talk all the time? Man, we have to keep moving our mouths ... move those beasties aside. I told you before when I go on and on about some petty thing the conversation I am having is not the conversation I am having. I am trying to get to something caught deep inside. If I told you all of it, I would have to start screaming. I would scream so loud and so long. I would throw my head back and scream until the last of the words left my body. I would fall on my hands and knees and beat the ground with my fists until it broke open. Satan himself would wake up to see what all the fuss was about. Instead, I sit here and I tell you PhDs do not impress me; it is the ability to love.

From the anthology: heart, 2002 The Wild Angels

Sandra Lee Schubert ©All Rights Reserved, 2025

Creative Vagabond: Transforming Ideas into Engaging Content. Articles. Courses. Blogs. E-Books. Social Media. Text Us. 347-418-1157

Bits and Pieces

Bits & Pieces

So what gets you up in the morning?  I mean, the alarm clock rings, and some dumb DJ is talking some trash about a starlet or a poor slob that met a bad ending.  And you are like “Why should I get up?” You put a leg out and test the air – too cool and you slide back in.  You roll over – maybe just a minute more or how about until the digital says 15 after the hour or how about 30 or maybe when the song is done? There you are deciding, deciding, deciding. Finally, you slide out, swinging your feet over the edge.  Maybe you slip them into fuzzy slippers or you hit the cold floor like diving into the first swim of the summer before you test the temperature.  And then you are hitting the shower or swigging down the first bit of hot coffee and it happens you feel life begin to run through your body.  You can see a little more clearly; you even may be humming a tune.  Who knows what got you out of the bed really, what inner urging made you decide this is the day to continue living.


News flash: Man Shot In Diner.  

The story goes that the man #1 had an argument with man #2 in the hallway of man #1’s apartment. The argument gets a little heated and man #1 knows his wife would be a real bitch if he wakes up the kids one more time because his good-for-nothing buddies get rowdy and don’t know what it is like to respect anybody.  So man #1 tries to end this whole deal but man #2 just feels like continuing this fight. In fact, he feels he has earned the right for a good fight.  After all he comes all the way from The Bronx to pick up from this guy.  He hits the subway and the Queen’s train is running like every twenty minutes and he has to hang out with some stinking drunk immigrants. One guy thinks he is going to take himself a little nap on his shoulder.  Well, man #2 is having none of that and kicks him to the other end of the car.  When he gets to Queens, man #1 is not opening the door. “Shit, he says, “it’s cold out. Open this damn door!”  He starts kicking it and kicking it and the neighbor’s dog starts barking and he hears the peephole opening and he turns just once and gives him his eye. He knows that look scares all the uptight folks and he can move through most of life pretty easy.  Man #1 is sleeping he finished his final deal two hours ago. He is in deep into a good dream when man #2 comes banging at his door.  The asshole was supposed to be there at midnight. He knows the policy is no business after 1 AM. The banging is waking up his wife who could sleep through anything but if you wake her there is hell to pay for a week.  Man #1 sees the beginning of morning creeping through the shade.  It is chilly and he doesn’t want his feet hitting the cold floor but the neighbor’s dog is barking so he swings his legs over the side of his bed.  He looks back at his wife with her dark hair spilled over her face and her full lips peering through it and he wants to slide right over to her side but he leaves…


The neighbors said man #1 ran like someone who wanted to live.  He zigzagged down the block as man #2 kept trying to shoot him, the bullets popping like small firecrackers breaking with the morning sun.  


In the diner on the corner, they had just opened with the first coffee already made.  The home fries were cooking.  The waitress was making a toasted bagel with peanut butter for this guy who had a thing for her and came in every day before he hopped into his cab.  The cook was breaking some eggs for an omelet and some scramble for the two guys who had just come off the night shift at the MTA.  They heard the screaming.  “Help me, help me!” They heard the pop, pop, pop and then man #1 broke through the door. The cook dropped two eggs onto the floor, the crack just like the pop pop from the street.  Everyone turned to look at the frightened face of man #1. “Call the police he’s going kill me.”  He ran to the back and tried to open the bathroom door.  But the door had a key that was at the front register.  The busboy looked at him blankly and man #1 turned to see man #2 burst through the door.  He had the gun held over his head.  He didn’t look at anyone else.  Man #1 turned back to face the busboy and he didn’t even feel the shot hit his back or the bullet rip his heart open. He just remembered the way his wife’s hair fell over her face and how her lips parted to kiss him one more time.  


The people in the diner never said a word they just watched him fall, dropping through the air.  Man #2 ran out the door and across the street to the subway.  He was glad to be getting out of Queens.  


The neighbors said man #1’s mother watched the whole thing from her window across the street.


A poem: His finger brushed her hip/penetrating to the bone.


Another news flash: 15-Year Girl Dies From A Kiss. 

She is ripe. That is what her boyfriend thinks.  Ripe, he never thought that before he wasn’t even sure what it meant.  But he looks at her and her hair falls in curls over her face. Her lips are bright red and look so good.  She looks at him her eyes are just so big, so he wipes the last of the peanut cup from his mouth and he kisses her.  Lips so warm and soft and so wet.  He slides his tongue all around and she pushed herself against him until her body just stops.  She looks at him for a moment trying to figure out what is wrong.  She remembers her mother at the window when she left.  She was looking after her as she walked down the street.  The boyfriend really didn’t know what happened he holds her limp body against his until they pull her away.  He can still feel the wetness of her mouth. 


The doctors said it can happen that way with allergies. It’s so quick you don’t even have the time to react. So quick, the life goes before you have even a moment to think about it.


Written on a subway wall: Where in my body does God live?


News flash #3: Subway Push Suspect Awaits Arraignment

They had argued all night. Starting at the club.  Starting over a girl.  They had been friends since the 2nd grade, first learning to read, and then doing drugs together in the back room of his uncle’s Elmhurst apartment.  They even learned about sex together, giving it up to the twins who went to their school. The twins were a grade above them but just liked to do it all the time, together, or with boys.  The friends never thought a thing about it, they were just content to have the sex thing over with.  As young men with drugs and some money in their pockets, they felt really good. But they had not been happy for awhile.  Now they were arguing their friendship shredding as the night wore on.  


People said they argued on the platform for a long time.  It was early, the sky just starting to lighten in the east.  The platform was elevated and outdoors and the wind hit them hard and there was no place to get away from it. No place.  They screamed and screamed not seeing the train emerging from down the tracks rising with the sun in the horizon.  They pushed at each other until one friend pushed so hard that the other just fell back, realizing he was falling into air.  The train never had a chance to stop.  One friend stood looking at his outstretched hands and before him was a train and not his friend. He remembered when they were eight and had their first cigarette behind the red door of the Catholic school. Neither one of them had an idea what to do with it.  It made them cough and then laugh.  They ran when they heard someone coming.  It was their first and last cigarette together; there were other things to discover.


The reporter was on the scene.  She told all the people who were up already, who were making coffee or eating their breakfast that the train would be running as soon as EMS had finished picking up the bits of pieces of the man from the track and the street below.  The sun was bright and the body bag was small as they carried it down the stairs.


Another poem found on a subway wall:  Fall open like a pear/ split down the middle.


So I am just asking, what gets you up in the morning?  I mean when your feet hit the ground what stops you from rolling back into the bed?  What makes you want to continue living?



First published in 11-30-05

Slight edits in 1-7-2025


Sandra Lee Schubert © All Rights Reserved, 2025

Revisiting Poetry

I am considering breaking this poem in half. Can you guess where? 

THE MOURNING OF THE LOSS OF TOWELS


Not a willing early riser, prone to steal extra minutes slipping further under the covers with just a nose to catch the air.


Sometimes I slip deeper, unintentional really, back to a dream that had me entertained before the clock bellows with morning voices and then later the second beep and finally the 3rd alarm stationed in the bathroom making me pull out of a dream a bitter end to a delicious sleep.


Occasionally morning calls to me and I wait in the dark, cold air.  I can make out the last of the deer scurrying off into the deep woods, pausing once to look at me the lone watcher on the stone balcony.  


Here is the moment when the night sounds die off and the silence is deep and the sky is still black. And then the slow roll of night back over my head as the morning begins her ascension over the horizon even before she crests the birds begin to sing a chorus of the song that builds like the dawn and with the first break of day, the shimmer of light cascades down the mountain to the river and finally lights my perch.


I am reminded of lost things.  The towels my mother taught me to fold, not like my aunt- she would have none of that.

First is one fold to the middle and the second fold over that smooth it out, fold the towel in half and in half again.  After all these years, 

I still fold towels the same way. 


But it is my mother’s towels, the ones we folded together, 

I miss the most.  Their frayed edges with soft middles, the way they wrapped me. And her hands, worn even then, her furrowed brow, brown hair and the faint smell of gardenia that clung to her.


Then I learned about loss and sorrow still to come. 

Mourning the loss of towels, 

I slip deeper under the covers to grasp one last dream.




Sandra Lee Schubert © All Rights Reserved, 2022

Creative Vagabond: Read this first.

A Performance with Jed Luckless and Sandra Lee Schubert


Thank you to everyone who came out on April 1st listen to us perform both poetry and music.
It was a great time. Watch the video. Like it if you want and subscribe too. Stay tuned for more.
 





Sandra Lee Schubert © All Rights Reserved, 2016
Writing for Life: Creating a Story of Your Own e-course available by email subscription. Click here for more information and to sign up http://bit.ly/write4life

Poetry and Music








Join us for Poets on Main in Boonton, NJ. 
Friday, April 1st - 7:30 PM
414 Main St, Boonton, New Jersey 07005

Poets and musicians have inspired each other for generations.
From lyrics to melody the collaboration between the two can
bring about great works of art.

Tonights collaboration will have music joined with words,
and words and music following each other. Part spontaneous
and part planned - we will riff off each other and create
something fun and wonderful.

+Sandra Lee Schubert  is a writer, poet and consultant. She is the founder of Wild Woman Network – forums to explore and express creativity and spirituality. She has created a successful e-course, leading a person through building the foundation for a lifetime of writing and creating their life story. She facilitated a popular writing program called the Wild Angels Poets and Writers Group at the historic Cathedral Church of St. John the Divine in New York City.

+Jed Luckless is NYC area musician who performs original music and streams his shows online in the virtual world of Secondlife. His improvisational style has earned him the nickname Jammin’ Jed and this spontaneity makes every performance a unique experience for the listener.Jed Luckless - http://jedluckless.com/

Hosted by Dave Pucciarelli
First Friday Late Night: Poets on Main is sponsored by: B&B Design and WDHA FM

Sign up for the event on Facebook

Sandra Lee Schubert © All Rights Reserved, 2016
Writing for Life: Creating a Story of Your Own e-course available by email subscription.
Click here for more information and to sign up http://bit.ly/write4life


A Grateful Dead thing...



The creative process is fraught with details - Here is my newest video for Drums and space - 
It is an interpretation based on a conversation with Jed Luckless about the Grateful Dead and drums and space in their concerts. The conversation inspired a poem (only some elements of the conversation are in the poem) I watched the Grateful Dead's Fare Thee Well concert on a big screen and took some photos. I played with a couple of ways of connecting the poem and photos together. Read more on YouTube
h/t +Jed Luckless  for the music and inspiration of this piece. 


Sandra Lee Schubert © All Rights Reserved, 2016
Writing for Life: Creating a Story of Your Own e-course available by email subscription.
Click here for more information and to sign up http://bit.ly/write4life