The
third Moon Prize* goes to melanie j zipin's moving poem "but love"—backdating
to the full moon of November 14, 2016. Congratulations on a mesmerizing poem, melanie
j zipin.
but
love (is memory)
by
melanie j zipin
sometimes
sadness washes over you
and
you just stand in the rain and get soaked
drenched
unmoving
inconsolable
blinded
by grief masked in tears –
you
don’t care
there’s
nothing you want to see
nowhere
you want to go
buckled
– gutted by waves of pure sorrow
drowning
gulping
in air
maybe
that’s where you need to be
time
is suspended
everything
goes still
silent
utters
forever
changed
when
the sun comes out, it’s unwelcome
and
yet…
a
baby cries – or laughs
and
we respond
we
must
we
are still here
we
are alive
we
refocus
we
engage
reluctantly
inevitably
continuing
until
it’s our turn to let go
this
is what we’re made of -
this
is what we’re left with - -
this
is what we leave - - -
-
stardust
-
- broken hearts
-
- - storm clouds
and
whatever’s next
even
memories can fade
but
we know how they made us feel
what
we are connected with
what
can we take with us?
nothing
that will last.
nothing
that is permanent
nothing
at all
but
love
*
* * * *
* The Moon Prize ($91) is awarded once a month
on the full moon for a story or poem posted in Writing In A Woman's Voice during
the moon cycle period preceding the full moon. I don't really want this to be
competition. I simply want to share your voices. And then I want to pick one
voice during a moon cycle for the prize. I fund this with 10% of my personal
modest income. I wish I could pay for each and every poem or story, but I am not that
rich. (Yet?) For a little while only there will be two awards each month, on
the day of the full moon and the day after, until I catch up with past
postings.
Why 91? 91 is a mystical number for me. It is 7
times 13. 13 is my favorite number. (7 isn't half bad either.) There are 13
moons in a year. I call 13 my feminist number, reasoning that anything that was
declared unlucky in a patriarchal world has to be mysteriously excellent. Then
there are 4 times 91 days in a year (plus one day or two days in leap years),
so approximately 91 days each season. In some Mayan temples there are or were
91 steps on each of four sides. Anyway, that's where the number 91 comes from,
not to mention that it's in the approximate neighborhood of 100.
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