2026, Amelia Grace, Day Book, everyday words, Ohio River Valley Literature, Poet's Life, poetry, prose, Stella, the no-scape

Daybook 2026 // Winter 2.27.26

Mean Muggin’. Selfie.

She has inherited my heart, I think. And so I may have to teach her to fight.

I was taught to fight my heart, this loneliness that nothing fixes, even happiness. They tried, anyway. My mother encouraging gentleness. My father demanding discipline. I tried teaching these lessons that I had not learned well to my daughter the same way. It worked out as well as anyone could expect.  

The loneliness. People often misunderstand the word. Loneliness. I am loved and seen and embraced and fortunate in that regard. But people are driven by primal urges the way diesel drives the steam engines on old riverboats. It radiates out, like a leaky oil can. Some are driven by love. Some by anger. Some by sadness. There are others. And then there are those of us driven by an impossible loneliness. It’s being a room full of people and not connecting to any of them. It’s being in a room full of family and friends and feeling rudderless. It’s being alone on a city sidewalk and drifting in and out traffic. It’s waking up each morning and having to remind yourself that even loneliness can be a blessing, and what a wonder it is when there is one person who can see through the mist to the heart the bleeds and wants and needs and loves and sometimes needs the loneliness, too. It sometimes drives people away without meaning to.

But it takes time to master and there are pitfalls. It’s easy to try and fill the loneliness with things. It never works. 

I had to learn to fight. My daughter did, too. Her daughter has inherited our heart, I think. And I think I will try teaching her differently. That sometimes, it’s ok to fight. Especially when the world is wrong. Because the heart never is.

Me and the brightest star in my sky. Family photo.

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2023, Poet's Life, poetry, the no-scape, Working Class Literature

33 years on and still ticking like a time bomb

Dad, you’d have been 93 today.
I’ve stopped wondering
what that would be like.

I don’t call out for you anymore
but I look in my bones.

I still blame you for not fearing death
but worrying about turning 60.

I think you would have been bowled over by your great-granddaughter.
The stories I told my daughter about you always fall short of the mark.

Sometimes I still want to tell you how I work on an old boat
how most days I leave it in hobbled in pain
and how it is all poetry in action.

I don’t think you’d understand.
But I like to hope you would.

Outside the Cincinnati Museum of Art
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