Category: poetry

  • autumn on my mind

    The ocean engulfs
    Deciduous reverie
    In sweater weather

    (sad how this haiku couldn’t fit: apple cider brewing on the stove for the next 5 months, balcony hot chocolate in quilt watching hummingbirds drinking)

    October 27, Dundarave Beach park, colonial west vancouver, unceded and occupied MST lands.
    A windy day, with 1m waves and driftwood.
    Deciduous trees in green, yellow, orange and red.

  • Pacific Angel Time

    Before my guardian angel
    came crashing to the ground
    in a heap of bloody early summer cottonwood fluff,
    he clipped the top of his left wing
    on an abstract steel sculpture
    recently implanted in a park in what used to be
    his typical oceanside flight plan from
    up there
    wherever
    to the balcony of my apartment
    where he would normally perch,
    occasionally to torment the odd pigeon or seagull
    that’s not quite tuned into
    the abstract, ethereal vibes
    that constantly inhabit my balcony,
    whether angel-boy is there or not.

    And before the crash to the ground,
    perhaps it was yesterday
    or last month
    [who knows, what with Pacific Angel Time and all]
    he hit a patch of vertigo
    while hovering in the cliffside updrafts
    in the Grand Canyon.
    When he panicked and plummeted
    he was fortunate that the mildest gust
    tossed him enough
    so he could land on the cliff edge
    rather than down down down.

    I used to be somewhat self-conscious
    about having a sub-standard guardian angel.
    I mean
    is my karmic balance so out of whack that I don’t rate
    a qualified guide?
    Did I piss off some early muse
    as a cocky teenage poet
    full of self-defined genius and
    overwhelming erotic allure
    and hyper-critical insight
    into the stupidity of the previous poetic generation that I
    —and only I—
    had the power to erase them from the canon?

    But as I got older
    from being such a teenage cock,
    I started meeting others who,
    when properly motivated by what I learned to cultivate—
    a safe trustworthy ear,
    would admit to having suspicions
    of cosmic incompetence
    “guiding” them into co-dependent, dysfunctional
    ultimately imploding, self-destructive
    relationships with uber-egotists.
    So maybe I wasn’t alone.
    Maybe we’re all in this trap,
    thinking there are reliable wings to catch us,
    when really they’re not necessarily
    any more reliable than our own common sense.

    And then I began asking who sets the standards
    for quality, or even competent,
    guardian angels.
    What committee was empowered
    and by who
    and what about the applicants—
    was there a sufficient pool to draw from
    or do dead 1970’s glam-rock drummers
    get to apply?

    And once I’d cultivated enough doubt and suspicion
    of my supposed guardian angel,
    I came to see him more as a companion,
    a mostly unobtrusive friend
    who thankfully lacked the capacity
    to annoy me like some inconsiderate roommate who never cleans his pasta pots.
    And wouldn’t you know,
    I began to see him more
    as my sense of awe lifted.
    He’d sit on my balcony rail,
    ten stories up,
    often lost in his nearly-patented daze
    staring at meandering
    lava lamp cloud formations—
    as if he had some major life decision dilemma looming over him.
    Maybe he did.

    There were even days
    when he looked so down
    and I was amidst an optimistic, inspired streak,
    that I felt it was actually my presence around him
    that made all the difference,
    that kept him from sliding off the rail
    to kiss the pool deck below
    at terminal velocity.
    Those were the days
    that if it weren’t for the groove I was in,
    I’d be cynical enough to think that the Great Chain of Being
    was actually one of those chains
    attached to a rubber plug in the bathroom sink,
    that every time it slipped out of your hand
    the chain would seek the plumbing depths
    by diving, jingling, down the drain,
    desperate to drag the plug with it,
    only to be ultimately frustrated when
    the plug
    merely
    did its job.

    So when I heard the crash
    and saw the bloody cottonwood fluff,
    I knew I was on my own.
    And the air,
    it doesn’t taste all that different
    after all.
    But I still miss you, angel-boy.


    Copyright 2002, Stephen Buckley
    2002.10.16, 915-945pm

  • inflection point!

    It’s early autumn
    Freckles fade now, because fog
    Cider sweater stars!

    s.e~b, 2025.10.04

  • midnight blue darkwind

    midnight blue darkwind

    This poem is almost 4 years old now (as I empty the content from meta platforms)…

    midnight blue darkwind

    nine stars still peek among clouds

    sleepier autumn

    s.e~b

    2021.10.30

  • The Lifting

    The Lifting

    You lay on your side
    naked
    fetal
    in a field
    of wild flowers and summer afternoon heat.
    I had no wings
    —though I imagined them—
    yet I hovered over you
    covering you
    from the elements.
    When I stood
    your halo pulsed.

    We went to a Shuswap Medicine Wheel
    in the summer of Oka.
    The eagles soaring above
    often appeared
    and disappeared
    out of
    and into
    nowhere, 
    despite our search
    for continuity in their flight. 
    My sweat lodge lasted days
    [liminally].
    When you emerged
    from the moon lodge
    I asked how it went.
    Your eyes looked at mine
    into mine
    through mine
    around mine
    all over mine,
    and you said
    —ambivalently—
    that you couldn’t say.
    You aren’t able to say?
    You aren’t allowed to say?
    You shouldn’t say?
    You aren’t moved to say?
    As we walked to an after dinner meal
    Your visage was substantial
    and weighty
    yet light
    and fluid
    and opposed to gravity.
    Your halo began to envelope
    your neck and head,
    pulsating.

    You lay on your side
    naked
    fetal
    in a field
    of wild flowers,
    bees,
    and summer twilight.
    I had no wings
    —though an eagle appeared above—
    I hovered over you
    covering you from the elements
    [the cooling sky].
    When I stood
    your whole body aura
    was pale
    and rose and fell
    with your breath.
    Time
    —clearly—
    was counting down.

    We were sitting on a boulder
    in March
    on the west shore slope of the Maritime Museum marina,
    facing the setting sun
    grinning into crispy winds
    and the intermittent spray
    of the life
    in the sea.
    Your ears were reddening.
    Your fingers icy.
    Your resolve was firm.
    Squeezing your eyes closed,
    inhaling deeply
    then holding your breath
    you willed your
    body temperature to rise
    miraculously
    beyond where the wool sweater
    expected.
    Your glow spilled out your eyes
    and cocooned your whole body,
    capturing parts of me
    —and the boulder—
    inadvertently.
    I’ve never since felt that 
    rich
    golden
    hue.

    You lay on your side
    naked
    fetal
    in a field
    of wild flowers
    on a northwestern shoulder of Mount Baker,
    chirping insects,
    and midnight blue sky.
    I longed for wings
    —the moon began to creep up over the glacier—
    I hovered over you
    covering you from the elements
    [the cooled sky].
    When I stood
    I watched you wake,
    yawn
    stretch
    sit up
    hug your knees
    grin,
    feel the glow
    emanating from your bones,
    close your eyes
    and fade into light,
    leaving me to walk
    back down to the forest
    alone,
    grinning,
    yet with tears of loss
    streaming down my face.

    The last time I ever saw you
    was the following winter
    in the pub
    at SFU
    where we sat together
    sharing a huge hot chocolate
    with Baileys,
    reading our respective books,
    pausing and watching the winter wind pelt
    —then sprinkle—
    the rain
    onto the windows.
    The moon wouldn’t rise that night
    behind the overcast darkening sky.
    Because of this,
    you looked up
    out the window
    and back at me.
    Borrowed time.
    Ineffable memories.
    The flux of moments.
    Your waiting.
    My wondering.
    The feeling of loss
    of contact
    of fleeting contact
    and days gone by.
    You stood,
    packed your gear,
    and walked out into the rain,
    to face south,
    look up into the brooding sky,
    take the pelting rain on the chin,
    let the wind whip your hair wildly
    and stare
    until the clouds thinned
    then parted
    and the moon
    returned to you.

    Copyright 2002, Stephen Buckley
    2002.07.24, 1:15-2:50am 

  • Comet Boy

    A light shines on a wall, where there are bumps in the plaster, that combine with the spreading light to look like a young boy is a comet. Is he your inner child?

    i love this guy

  • Malcolm-Jamal Warner, so so grounded

    Malcolm-Jamal Warner, so so grounded

    the flower in his hair? Yeah…watch:

    https://www.instagram.com/reel/DMY1bOGyic4

    About 20 years ago, he used to hang out at the Sunday night Thundering Word Heard (created by T.Paul Ste. Marie, 1965-2007) Cafe Montmartre poetry cafe on Main Street for a few months, while filming in Vancouver. He was as normal a guy as everyone else there. Normal, interesting, curious about people all around. Total standup guy. I knew him for those months and really enjoyed his company.

    The show he was filming was with Luke Perry. Jeremiah.
    They have both died now, both wayyyyy too young.

    Luke Perry met lots of film kids at a high school, where they had a great film program, and was a location for many tv and movie shoots. Including Riverdale.

    He had alllll the time in the world for them. Extras, kids with speaking lines, whoever who wanted to talk or ask questions.


    Those 2 were amazing.

    More Malcolm, now he is a part of this legacy:

    https://www.instagram.com/reel/DMYvaGsOmqq/
  • you have always had the machete, 2021

    [i’m in this weird space of decoupling from the broligarchs. one phase of this is retrieving my poetry that exists only as instagram stories. this annoys me, nevertheless I persist]

  • the library of tears

    once, my MP toured me through the library of parliament in Ottawa — truly like a disneyland for nerds

    I was thinking about “library of tears,” as a concept

    Grief

    Pain

    Brutal let downs

    Rejection

    Sheer violence

    What does that library look like, is it wood paneled, smell of dust, cat hair, the wrong herbal tea…

    Are they hiring?


    like, what even IS this? we all deserve such cathedrals