Rosh Chodesh Aftermath
by Anita Pulier
Rosh Chodesh, the day celebrating the
arrival of the new Jewish month, has long been recognized as a woman's holiday.
We have come to
a tribal meet up:
women welcoming a new moon.
This gathering reminds us
of the 60s and long dormant labels,
feminist, radical, activist.
We introduce ourselves to
strangers and friends,
atheists, believers, sceptics.
We bow to ancestral wisdom,
cycles and moons,
tie ribbons on trees,
form a circle, hold hands,
listen, look up,
speak of the women
who raised us,
share stories, not all good.
After a pot luck dinner
and a poem or two
about aging and death.
We talk, visit, sip wine.
Not much else happens.
We gather empty casseroles
dig out car keys,
and buckle up
which is when we
find ourselves smiling
at that sliver of moon
a bit surprised that
something so old
can seem so new.
* * * * *
After retiring from her law practice,
Anita Pulier served as a U. S. representative for the Women's International
League for Peace and Freedom at the United Nations.
Her chapbooks Perfect Diet, The Lovely Mundane
and Sounds Of Morning as well as her book The Butchers Diamond
were published by Finishing Line Press. Anita’s poems have appeared both
online and in print in many journals and several anthologies. Recently she has
been the featured poet on The Writers Almanac.
This wonderful poem is sweet and atthe same time transcendent. From the first line you know that you are surrounded by friends and you can trust them.There are momemts of poise and a drscriptive power that generates a feeling of hope and optimism.
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