Friday, October 31, 2025

The Mountain Forest

 






The rain barely shifted on the
horizon, mist rises from mountain
slopes, dark clouds hang suspended
determinedly lodged on the mountain
peaks, comfortable there, resistant
to the dim edge of the sun, anxious to
burn away dark vapour dimming the
day's early summer aspirations.

Hemlock, pine, spruce and fir
present in staid stately array, hung
with mosses and lichens that cling
too to the grey, red, black granite
walls of the gorge down which the
mountain stream storms over the
great boulders the mountain slopes
have shed since time lost its memory.

The robust understory of moose
maple, dogwood and ferns march
in orderly procession up the slopes
under the canopy of a growing
presence of beech and yellow birch.

Old, crumbly and opportunity-rich
trunks gently decaying, do double
duty as nursing logs, with spruce
and hemlock seedlings clinging fast
to their humus-rich surfaces. When
the seedlings become mature enough
to fend for themselves, their nurses
become part of the organic whole.

The air is perfumed with the fragrance
of seasonal blooms, wafted by gentle
breezes. The repeated peal of a
Pileated woodpecker rends the air.
Thrushes sing their welcome of
still-impending rain. Yellow Admirals
flit from ground to graceful, looping
heights, disappearing into the witches'
brew of bright-green tangled leafage.

 

 

Thursday, October 30, 2025

The Winged Forest



















The clear, ringing peal of a blue jay
dissipates the silence of the woods
as from its perch it asserts ownership
of all it surveys. Soon, however
winging silently off in search of
another perch for a repeat performance
clearly besotted with its idea of self
as master of its leafy-treed landscape.

A nestling crow, newly acquainted
with wide spaces and the emerging
buoyancy of its tender but boldly
outspread wings flies awkwardly from
branch to branch of an old pine, the
young bird's continual quacks of
querulous demands driving its hovering
parents to frantic distractionary tactics.

There, the sun ablaze in the vast blue
sky, sending shafts of pure gold through
the dense forest canopy to light up
four goldfinches, on the branches of a
neat little Hawthorn, like lemons
growing on a lemon tree - with the
fragrance of sweet pears wafting from
the blooming bedding grasses below.

Elsewhere in this summer forest, a
cardinal's high, sweet trill excites the
atmosphere, and the response is swift
and bright, as the pair take flight in
scarlet passage deeper into the
embracing, emerald-green woods.

Robins, a family of juveniles loathe to
take wing, scatter bipedally in short
purposeful bursts along the forest trail.
They forage among the cinquefoil, the
buttercups and blooming clover, sending
up startled blue, winged creatures whose
concern is to avoid becoming a meal
intent upon their very own life journey.

 

Wednesday, October 29, 2025

Impressions

 


Interesting, matching supermarket
grocery-carts by their contents, to
the people pushing them. Cause for
smug superiority, like the appearance
on urban streets of the obese strolling
along, lapping at an over-filled ice-cream
cone, wolfing down take-out pizza,
hamburgers, with all fixings intact.

Have they never heard of appetite
restraint? Eating themselves into
morbidity, whacking their futures
patterning their offspring to vulgarly
immediate consumption. In a world
where temptation is everywhere, good
common sense has succumbed to greed
and heedless urges for satisfaction
well exceeding satiety and logic.

There is the shopper: young, attractive
grossly ponderous in height and girth,
shopping cart brimming with all those
notorious products aimed at vulnerable
kids through ubiquitous advertising.
One, however, with full knowledge and
concern, does not casually condemn.
Despite which, the assumption is made
this consumer is an unintelligent fool.

Your cart unloaded, its virtuous contents
of fresh produce predominating, a total
absence of pre-prepared "convenience"
foods absent nutrition, weighted with salt,
sugar, fats, in favour of only natural,
preparation-untampered foods; this is
your superior choice. Reach across to
grasp the bar to separate your choices
from that of the next shopper's faux food.

The large young woman beams with
gratitude, "thank you" chiming from her
bow-shaped lips in a completely spontaneous
charming lilt of obvious sincerity. Not much
of an effort to elicit such an acknowledgement
you observe, and she trills with laughter
claiming civility worth its weight in gold.
A response worthy of a noble prize for
social attitude. Gaining from you an
relaxed grin of total acceptance.

When your purchase rings through at
$132.28, and you proffer $150 in U.S. bills
and innocently enquire whether Canadian
coinage is acceptable: one quarter, 3 pennies
the cashier frowns, seeks advice from a
supervisor who briskly advises this to be
a disallowed irregularity. The errant shopper
behind you, she of the morbidly obese shape
and cupid smile, urges upon your unwilling
hand 28 cents in U.S. coin. A valuable,
required and kind lesson in due humility.

 

 

Tuesday, October 28, 2025

Roots and Rocks

 





 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

They reach everywhere, dark and
contorted, a wide-reaching tangle
of roots splaying over the steep
mountain trail. The better to trip
the unwary, unheeding hiker. But
this is, after all, the habitat of these
looming forest giants, the pines and
hemlocks, maples and beech whose
offspring luxuriate under their
forbears' canopy, in the rich organic
soil of earlier such great species,
felled by time and woodsmen.

Step lightly and be aware not only
of those strangling roots threatening
the progress of intrepid bipedal advance
but the rocks scattered on the landscape
surrounded by the granite peaks from
whose slopes they were dislodged many
ages ago. Consider the rocks, so deeply
embedded, stepping stones for the
breathless ascent to the mountain's far
summit, well above the treeline.

Listen in the process, to the fresh
clear sound of the cold mountain
stream as it too tumbles over boulders
interrupting downward passage
sending cool spray to vaporize into
the air from the waterfalls thus
created, where mosses grow thick
green and lush over trunks and soil.

Hear the thrushes' songs reverberate
through the forest, see the flight of an
Eastern Kingbird, a downy woodpecker.
Note the presence of oaks siding the
trail as you rise, and the prevalence
of tiny chipmunks whisking their way
over the roots and the rocks, their element.

There are, in the undergrowth, dogwood,
sensitive ferns, moose maple and sumac.
Beside the trail, dank, wet, rich bog and
here and there, lilies and orchids, blackberry
canes and blueberry patches. The ascent
steeper, more dauntingly arduous
the trees stunted in weather-agonized
shapes. Oak and azalea thrive, along with
laurel and small, twisted pines. Mountain
sorrel blooming, and birds on the wing.

The terrain becomes bare with huge
granite ledges and wide, smooth slopes
rainwater captured in small, ubiquitous
granite sinkholes. Gaze, from this height
on the miniature landscape far below.
Count, if you can, neighbourly peaks
marching into the far distance.

Marvel at the wide, deep bowl of the
over-arching sky, the placid white and
fringed clouds, hastily moving off to
make way for others, more aggressively
dark and hostile. Tree roots there are
none here, but a glut of tiny, delicate
alpine plants. Of rock there is a defined
defiant and deliberate presence.

 

 

Monday, October 27, 2025

The Homework Kid


Well, that’s it. I am pissed. I am really pissed. My mom says I should just let it go, and be thankful things turned out that way. All of us should. Take advantage of the break. There’ll be more than enough challenges, she said, next year, when I start high school. I know all of that. I know more or less, what to expect there. Things will be different, for sure.

But I’m still here, in elementary school, most of the way through Grade 8. I know I used to grit my teeth and say I can see it through. Meaning to the end of the school year. Meaning having HER ride on my back, driving me nuts with her screeching. No, not just me, everyone. All of us. Which gave us a lot to talk about, didn’t it? Having a teacher who we couldn’t respect.

You could say that everyone going into her class kind of knew what to expect. She had a reputation, and not a good one, but then hardly any teacher in the school has a ‘good’ reputation, if you know what I mean. Maybe the primary-grade teachers do, but not the others. Some of them aren’t bad, some of them are pretty awful. You could say Mrs. McVetty’s was about as bad as they get. I had a friend at school a grade above me, a really good friend. We used to spend a lot of time together in the schoolyard, and after school. She would tell me about the things McVetty used to do. She hated her.

My mom said I should give her a chance, not rely on gossip. It wasn’t gossip, it was friendly advice. But you know, when September came around and we were first in her class, I thought what the hell! I wondered what all the fuss was about, because she seemed really good. I mean she explained things, it seemed as if she cared about whether we understood subjects like math, and she’d seem to be extra careful to see that everyone knew what was happening before she moved on to higher levels.

I really appreciated that. It helped me a lot, it really did. I felt pretty good about stuff, especially math and science, not my best subjects. That lasted for the first two months. And after that, wow, you wouldn’t believe the kind of atmosphere around our classroom. Not, as my mom said, conducive to learning. Because this teacher just kept going off the rails. Seems she couldn’t control the class, and she couldn’t control her reaction to the class.

Yep, some of us were kind of noisy and we didn’t like being told not to be. She began to move us all around the place, making us sit here and there and everywhere but where we wanted to, to get us away from one another. That only made things worse; because we were further apart from the people we really liked we just upped the activities that got her mad. We were louder, we were sneakier when she wasn’t looking, some of the guys began to airplane notes and the place went wild.

If you think we were loud, that was nothing compared to her. I mean she went berserk, completely nuts. She would screech at us like she was out of her mind. My mom said she could understand that; I drive her crazy, too. She said all of us should give a thought to the difficulty of teaching 24 hormone-charged obstreperous kids (her words). Tough, I said, other teachers do it and they don’t blow like Mount Olympus.

Funny thing about that, my mom’s sympathy for Mrs. McVetty, it just didn’t last. She stopped telling me to try to tone things down and set an example for the other kids once I told her that my teacher criticized my mom. My mom was shocked. Criticize her? What for? Well, Mom, I said, remember all those evening school events we usually don’t attend?

“Those useless non-events? That’s what she’s criticizing me for, for not hauling myself out in the evening after working a day job, working at home, looking after you and wanting nothing but to get into an early bed? That’s what’s wrong with me?”

Yeah, Mom”, I laughed "that’s what’s wrong with you".

“Hey, remember, chum, this was a mutual decision. After the first few we went to, we both decided it was a waste of time.”

“Yep. I remember. You don’t get any complaint out of me for bypassing them. I’m just telling you what my esteemed teacher said.”

“She said... What did she say?”

“That you’ve got your priorities screwed up.”

“She said that? Who the hell does she think she is, anyway?”

“Don’t get mad at me, Mom, I’m just telling you what she said. I don’t think that way. In fact, I felt really bad, insulted that she would even mention you. You are none of her business. I just walked away from her.”

“Oh.”

After that Mom didn’t have too much to say about Mrs. McVetty. Although I gave her plenty of opportunity. It was like, every day coming home from school she’d ask how was school and I’d tell her how awful it was. Because of our teacher.

Like, what kid wants to go to school to be screamed at every damn day? And she picked on me a lot. No, not just me, most of the other kids got it too, but me especially. That’s my opinion.

She’d get this idea that you were doing something you weren’t supposed to and she’d keep going at you until you were ready to scream. Even about who your friends were. A teacher is supposed to teach. She hardly does that, most of the time. You don’t expect a teacher to be a social worker, to get herself all worked up about the kids in her class having friends. Some kids don’t deserve to have friends. They turn on people who are decent to them. That’s what happened to me.

There’s this girl, Shawna, not Shawna MacDonald, Shawna Boyd. Everyone likes Shawna MacDonald. Shawna Boyd, well everyone just kind of ignored her. I thought she never did anything to me, why should I ignore her? So I didn’t, I spoke to her, and she kind of matched herself up with me, and it was annoying because I didn’t always want her around, but there she was, always in our group.

The other girls would glare at her and that made me include her more, but I resented doing it, kind of. She kept text-messaging me outside school, and I responded, always, but she was kind of a nuisance, know what I mean? And then I found out that she had lied to me, telling me that one my friends said horrible things about me. And then I found out it wasn’t true, and I had it out with her.

Now I don’t exactly ignore her, I speak to her, but I don’t let her hang around anymore. That’s just the way it is. So Mrs. McVetty gets on my case and wants to know all about it, what happened and why. She has no right to do that. I just told her ‘nothing, nothing’s wrong’.

Holly and Morgan can’t stand Mrs. McVetty, they’re worse than me about her. You can bet we have lots to talk about, and none of it very flattering to Mrs. McVetty. Come to think of it, there weren’t many kids in the class who even liked her, although a couple of kids did defend her reputation. They thought she was all right. Good for them. They were her little class pets, so it’s hardly surprising they would come out on her side. She never yelled at them. Well, hardly ever.

Like, it’s crazy, she gives us new math work, writes on the board how to understand the stuff, tells us here’s some homework, and anyone who doesn’t get it can ask her for special help. I was stupid enough to go to her a few times and ask for help. I know I was stupid, because she as much as said so. And instead of helping me she was really sarcastic, so I would never ask her for any help again. I managed to figure things out for myself anyway, because I’m really good with homework. Matter of fact, my friends ask me to help them mostly. Not that I‘m the smartest kid in the class, I’m not.

There’s a couple of kids who are good at everything, sports, math, science, history, geography. Art, too. I can’t draw anything to resemble what it’s supposed to be. I’m not bad at athletics, but not good, either, although it’s kind of fun. I am pretty good at writing. When we get assignments to write poetry or book reviews, or history reviews, I write the longest reports and reviews, and when I read my poetry in front of the class everyone listens and I get a huge applause. But Brian’s a much better poet than I am; he can write poetry like it’s nothing. I’ve got to feel really upset about something before I can produce a poem, don’t know why.

Anyway, all of us were really getting fed up. Not only did we have to put up with all this screaming abuse day after day, and listening to our teacher accuse us of being ignorant little brats and worse, but she kept assigning all kinds of homework. And tests, day after day, one test after another. The good thing about the tests, though, is that she said anyone who didn’t get a mark they were proud of, would be allowed to do the test over. I took advantage of that opportunity all the time, a lot of the kids didn’t bother. But I figure, anything that helps pump up your marks at the end of the year is worthwhile. Besides, I know if you keep doing things over, like repeating things, they eventually stick with you.

I know I do a lot of complaining about the homework, because there’s so much of it. But even though I do complain a lot, I don’t really mind it all that much. I guess I’m pretty organized, that way. Besides which, I don’t get out all that much, since we live in the country. It’s not like I can just go for a walk somewhere, other than on our property, all six acres of it. No thanks, really.

I used to invite my friends over and I’d go over to their places quite a lot. We used to sleep over all the time, for the entire week-end. I don’t do that so much anymore. Don’t really know why, just don’t. I do a lot of reading though, a whole lot. I treasure my books. Don't like to lend them out to anyone, because none of my friends are careful enough with books. I hate dog-eared pages, it's horrible that anyone could do that with a book. So I do a lot of reading, and sometimes I even read some of my favourites over again. Sometimes I get bored, but even though my mom says invite your friends over, I won't.

Anyway, we see one another all the time at school. Sometimes, for some of us, it’s enough. More than enough, some of the girls are really irritating sometimes. The guys not so much, because we don’t really hang out with them. I heard once, someone told me about a school that decided to separate the boys from the girls, and kept them in separate classes, so they could do an experiment that organized classes to be taught in a way that the teachers thought would be better for the boys, and the same for the girls. I think that sucks. It’s much better when the guys and the girls are together, in one class. It’s far more interesting. With the guys around you never know when something really funny is going to happen.

Yes, I’m kind of off track. I was explaining, or I meant to explain, how kind of mysterious it is that all of a sudden, Mrs. McVetty isn’t there any more. I don’t mean upstairs, in her head, we’re kind of convinced she’s not all there, actually. I mean for a few days last week we had ‘spares’ come in. When that happens, it’s guaranteed to be a boring day. They don’t teach, they just depend on you to do work that’s been assigned by your normal teacher. And if there’s no work that’s been assigned, the spares just look at what Mrs. McVetty has written down for them, and tell us to get on with things that way. Couldn’t be more boring. We learn nothing, nothing at all. That really, truly bugs me.

And then last week this guy came in. Said he’d be around awhile. He’s a new teacher, looks like he’s around 26, or something. I doubt he’s had all that much experience, although he told us he has. He said he’d be filling in for Mrs. McVetty for the rest of the year. We’ve got almost two months left in the school year, and she’s opted out. She said nothing to us, nothing at all. She did say, at the start of the school year, she said it was a pledge: she would do everything necessary to completely prepare us for high school. She promised. And then what did she do? bog off, that's what. That really burns me up.

Seemed at first it would be a big relief. No more headaches, no more having to stick our fingers in our ears while she screeches at us, telling us we’re the worst class she’s ever had, absolute morons. She didn’t use that word, but it was what she meant.

This guy is okay. I don’t think all that much of him, actually. Just another teacher, certainly not the best I’ve had, but not the worst, either. The worst is no longer in our classroom. It’s too early, I guess, to see whether he’ll be any better than her at teaching us stuff. But already we can see he’s not into all the stuff she was, assigning us poetry and book review studies, and math and geography and science. He’s a bit of a wuss, we all thought.

I asked some of the guys what they thought of him. Shrug. You’d think they might be more interested, kind of, because he’s a guy and they’re guys, but it doesn’t seem like they’re reacting that way at all. It’s just kind of as though they’re disinterested.

Guess Mrs. McVetty knocked the stuffing out of all of us. He’s got his own take on the curriculum, and classes aren’t slopping over any more. We hardly get any homework. You’d think I’d be happy about that, but I’m not. I miss the homework, I really do.

And, guess what? I actually feel a little cheated about not having homework to do after school. It’s like I feel my academic credentials will be plummeting, I won’t be learning as much as I need to know, and that really, truly sucks. If you’d asked me a month ago if I’d be feeling like this I would never have believed it.

I mean we really had an awful load of stuff to get done, every day of the week, and week-ends no exceptions. It was a miserable burden, even if we did get used to it. And now, all of a sudden, nothing. Okay, maybe we should just kind of adjust, coast on the fact that we’ve got it easy now for the rest of the school year. But it just doesn’t feel right.

So, we should celebrate because we don’t get headaches any more being exposed to some adult who isn’t capable of mustering enough internal resources to calmly teach and discipline the people in the class who are always out of line? You’d think so. I’d have thought that way.

Okay, the same kids are still acting up. At first this guy, Mr. Masterson, just calmly put them in their place. And they shut up. Then that didn’t work any more. And he began yelling. It was different than what Mrs. McVetty used to do. This is a guy, and he raises his voice, and it’s loud and strong, not shrill and excited. Just a big, surprising blast. And everyone shuts up.

He yells “I don’t have to take this crap!”. And everyone shuts up. 
 
 

Sunday, October 26, 2025

Gifted Elements Of Life



















A blue, hazy sky, unresistant to the
sun's imperiously blazing presence
and a wind skilled at shifting relief
over energy-depleted limbs, exerted
through a vigorous morning foray
into beckoning woodlands.

A leisurely, yet energetic amble,
where we venture to be re-energized
by our direct confrontation with
all things natural, in brief release
from the din of the mechanistic
world of nature-spurning humankind.

Sunlight filtering through the leafy
canopy reveals a golden skein, a veil
of gilded particles shifting endlessly
through the warm, still air. This
gold dust of organic renewal swirls
everywhere, settles and rests
infiltrates, and insinuates at will.

Yet without will; at the discretion
and direction of nature's purpose. Our
orifices receive the powdered elements
of plant life, even as all it settles upon
absorb its presence as the continuation
and very manifestation of life.

As we ourselves are constructed of
all the heavenly matter that we name
star dust circulates, is absorbed and
lends life its essence, in an unending
celestial continuum of birth and re-birth.

 

 

Saturday, October 25, 2025

The Eternal Revenants

 

How readily do people affect a
grievance not theirs, perceiving
injustice in an confused landscape
of dire human convergence of
spite, hatred and victimhood
head to head with the aspirations
of others to obey the imperative
to survive, by hopeful co-existence.

Hatred destroys those it drowns in
a sea of vast self-pity and the will to
avenge. Both inspire a cunning to
enable portrayals of abandonment and
piteous need where the goal is not to
seek conciliation but to impose a violent
reckoning for nothing less in flawed
human certainty will ease the anger
and the pain but to inflict revenge.

Clever manipulation of perceptions
provoke a soul-satisfying backlash
of heated denunciation to harry and
condemn those innocent of intent to harm,
whose feckless enterprise in ensuring their
own longevity has aroused the fury of
others, resentful of their presence in a
time and a space felt reserved for them.

A nation alone and condemned in its
establishment, where once its forebears
held thousands of years of custody of the
land, now isolated in stern denial of
presence. A nation, long homeless, dispersed
and oppressed, yet again singled out among
nations for contempt and rabid denial.

A people whose presence brings the genius
of knowledge to the world unparalleled by
any other, suppressed regardless, their
numbers brutally abbreviated in a vile
collaboration of planned extinction. The
remnants forge on instinctive with hope
and belief to meet again and yet again
brutal adversity without surcease.

Ancient sages forecast their dim visions
of an eternity of wild nightmares of
horrors and degraded aspirations. A people
apart yet of this time and of this place
held in uncertain esteem and quite certain
disdain. Holding fast and true to the
living dilemma of their presence in a
hostile world of others' beliefs.

Tragedy and opportunity are visitors
in equal measure on the threshhold of
that welcome-impoverished people. Their
struggle to surmount the obstacle of
apartness, otherness, and the strangeness of
subordinate status as lesser than most, yet
sustains the vigour of their needs and their
resolve and inner resources will, in the
final analysis, prevail; that stubborn lot.