Q & A on the New Gutter

Q & A on the New Gutter

Q: Isn't the old gutter's silent collection of rain nice, esp. at night?
A: In the wee hours of the night, I am awake, might as well listen to the rain drums in the gutter to my running thoughts.

Q: What about the thoughts?
A: Lots of things, like my elderly friend in the war-torn country suffering cold and hunger in the old age; my near-miss joy in the past, etc.

Q: Aren't all the failure your fault?
A: Yes and no.

Q: What's that?
A: Yes, because accepting it as my fault make me calm; no, because it didn't make sense how I did screw up the project that smoothly climbed the hill overlooking glorious waves.

Q: Again, who is the culprit?
A: Demon, coaxing me into finishing in a hurry before someone does it. Life is a song bird in the air, with a variety of repertoire; before it flies away you've got to capture the note just right for you; however, you must not do it in a hurry.

Q: not fast enough is your fault. Successful people don't idle.
A: The rain stopped. Had we not argued, I could have captured useful ideas. My song bird is about to fly away.

Q: Cheer up. Golden songbird is the best one. It will surprise you.
A: Moan old pain for sure.

Q: It depends on your ears.
A: My ears are trying to tune in; with some luck, I might get something.

--Byung


Presumption

Presumption

We, oldies, look out the window quite often;
sometimes, our neighbors catch ourselves, and
we wave to each other.

We heard the other couple arguing:
"So, you like the flatbellied old bee?"
"Like her flat belly is all."

"Let us divorce,
so you can marry the
flat-bellied woman."

The next day the arguing continued, and
the couple left home in seperate cars.
Are they going to get a divorce?

After a while, he returnedalone and
sat hunched on the porch. We thought
she wouldn't be back soon--maybe, never.

"He needs some company,"
He was about to visit the man
when his wife returned.

Later that day, the couple showed up
at our door, all smily. In her arms are
a couple of white puppies.

"Would you like one?"
We both grabbed one of the puppies.
"Oh, isn't he cute?"

© Byung A. Fallgren

The Midnight Horseback Rider

The midnight Horseback Rider

The moonlight was sneaking in
through the gap in the curtains and sat silently
on my bed when a sudden tippy-top, tipity-top
of the horse's hoofs hummed on the road outside
my window. My impulse was to see who it is
but remained in my bed, charmed by the
unusual equestrian rhythm, and lest
it might stop if I moved. Smooth and steady
cadence, alternating walk and trot; someone
must be practicing equestrian gate;
passionate performance, driven by a skillful
conductor. The sound faded away
as the rider and horse moved down the road.
Only then did I catapult to the window.

The moon was on the treetop, shinning on the
empty street; im my head, the horse's gate still echoed;
the rhythmes from the past dream.
Even in my old age, the rhythms from
the past dreams are still drumming
in the deep of night, like the
midnight horseback ride on a moonlit street.

© Byung A. Fallgren

Sunny Day with no War is…

Sunny Day with no War is…

silent singing of the grass
in the lawn, praising the sun;
a wishful imagination or a
person with overactive endorphin?
a scream of an old woman at her
husband taking the trash out.
the man counter yells at her:
"And you wonder why I don't give you a flower."
A bluejay squawks, scolding the couple:
"There go the unhappy humans. Will they
ever get along, even on a sunny day with no war?"

© Byung A. Fallgren