Tuesday, May 5, 2026

A Bit Much

 A Bit Much

 

A

Book

I’m reading currently

Tells me more

 

Much more than I wanted to know

Understand, it’s poetry, and my take is a

Cautionary tale on being too 

Honest.  I mean, some things are better left unsaid. Right? 

 

Yeah,  fuck that. 

 

Like MFA also stands for 

Many Followers Acquired

Make Future Amazing. (Fill in the blanks.)

Meaning Framed Accurately (For once)

My Filter’s Absent. (Found a new home)

Moon Files Applause (Universal approval)

Mirrors Flash Agreement (It’s confirmed)

Ministry of Forthrightness Affirms (Impeach him)

 

I rest my case.

Monday, May 4, 2026

Time To Wean Myself Off The Helium

 Time To Wean Myself Off The Helium

 

I’ve got a little chronic inflammation
camped out in my belly like it paid rent.
I feel like I over‑inflated myself
party balloon, car‑dealership, wavy man
except nobody’s clapping.

I don’t feel like my old light self,
you know the one
pre‑90‑day bender, pre‑wake‑up call,
before gravity found my forwarding address.

Yeah, I had surgery.
Now I feel dense.
Millstone chic.
Like if I took an ambitious, heroic dump
I might retire five pounds lighter
and emotionally reborn.

But no.
Everything’s tightening its belt.
There’s nowhere for the extra air to flee.
Not even a tasteful hiss.

My blood’s gone viscous.
My heart and organs are marching
to something that sounds like a funeral dirge
played by a tired band
slightly out of tune.

I’m slower.
Duller.
My knife couldn’t cut string cheese
if the cheese insulted its mother.

I’m fresh out of freshness.
Past my sell‑by date.
Like, yeah.
It’s time to go home.

Sunday, May 3, 2026

To The Man Who Keeps Leaving me Love Letters with Numbers

 To The Man Who Keeps Leaving Me Love Letters with Numbers 

 

Dear Bob,

Thanks for signing your notes.

We’ve got to stop meeting like this—

You’re a real go-get-her… with suspiciously neat handwriting.

But I’m stuck on the numbers.

I keep trying to call you—

but my phone says, “Nice try. That’s a locker combo.”

Also: the pink Post-its.

So bold. So… 80% highlighter, 20% cry for help.

Is that your personality showing— or just your stationery budget?

Confession: I’m heterosexual.

So if you meant these for the other “Cornelia,”

please use the box on the left by the Men’s Room—first door, first heartbreak.

We’re the Ladies League. We have clipboards.

If not… congratulations. You’ve piqued my interest.

Next note, please include a selfie. Preferably with both eyes open.

One more thing about me:

I prefer a golfer who dances.

Or a hiker who dances. Any man who dances.

You may be a musician—Steven Tyler energy, fewer scarves.

But you must dance. This is non-negotiable. Like cart fees.

See you in the Fall.

Waiting with bated breath (and a nine iron),

Cornelia

Saturday, May 2, 2026

Why You Should Care

Why You Should Care

 

Why should they care—

when your face goes full loading screen as a friend announces,

“She’s an author and a photographer.”

So what—do you want confetti or a coupon?

My name is Cornelia De Dona.

I kept my ex-husband’s last name—

not nostalgia—just because it glides off the tongue like good bourbon,

and I’m not high-strung.

Not high-maintenance either—more like low-wattage menace with good posture.

My claim to fame is simple:

I’ve won awards—tiny gold stars for the way my mind bites the page.

Recognition, too, for my writing and my art—

the art being photography: stealing light and returning it as evidence.

People tell me my photos are beautiful,

like this burrowing owl—

she posed as I passed, a pocket-sized bouncer in feathers,

eyes flashing WARNING, and, honestly, I was impressed—

she gave me her best angle, like she’d trained in a studio I can’t afford.

And after all, that’s all anyone can do

show up, hold still, and dare the world to look back. 

Friday, May 1, 2026

Resolution

 Resolution

I resolve to keep writing

even during episodes of blankness and staring at white space

which is a new series on STUCK. 

I can’t believe the names some people come up with, like perplexity? 

Perplexity does not imply intelligence, artificial or otherwise. Or is that supposed to be us? Nope, it’s about predictability, Math!! Look it up. 

Today is Friday’s List

1.   Have coffee

2.   Get dressed

3.   Take out the garbage and recycling

4.   Take a walk

5.   Go to Water Aerobics class

6.   File papers

7.   Solve the “what not to bring north” riddle

8.   Stop making lists. 

9.   Look up sense of humor. 

10.                 Do the math

 

 

 

Thursday, April 30, 2026

A Poem In Your Pocket

 A Poem In Your Pocket

 

Can rip you to the core

Make you soar through the back door 

Explore Bangor from the floor

Bring you more noir, or a war you swore

you’d deplore.

You’d score points with the Biltmore 

crowd with a poem in your pocket.

They’d  fall for 

 A white-glove

a shove from above

Another encore of love

To save us all from falling into the abyss

I’m sure we wouldn’t miss

The kiss between Elizabeth and Robert Browning

or the dip of her quill when she wrote

“How do I love thee? Let me count the ways.”

Or as he swooned with bliss

From her bed to his soft core, wanting more.

Wednesday, April 29, 2026

Distraction

 Distraction

Imagine this,

A huge data center is being built beneath that ballroom

where the East Wing once stood.

Like the ones they have in Israel

But newer, improved, and state-of-the-art

The data centers can also survive missile attacks

Let that sink in

AI and the government

are BFFs.  I wonder if it’s Lindy, Perplexity, or Jasper?

Probably a CIA classified platform specifically designed for covert operations.

The Ballroom is a distraction

It’s fluff

It’s the lid on what is really going on.

It’s the tip of the iceberg

It’s not about assassination attempts

and yeah, we’re paying for it.

 

 

Monday, April 27, 2026

Believe

 Believe

 

When you’re married to a narcissist

you think you’re crazy

 lazy

or hazy

anything but sane.

 

You’re the one to blame

for making him act like that.

 

So you had a spat

and then sat 

like a dunce

In the back of the room

with a spoon

drooling

over abstract things

like normal. 

 

Because he is a master

of lies

can corrupt, then disguise

like a cat

with nine lives.

 

Younger women sigh

hard as they try

they still don’t  know why

do not fall for this guy.

 

Because he’s helping himself,

not you. 

 

Boo Hoo.

get screwed

and tattooed

then skewed

blaze it across the sky

believe the lies

then fly

like a pigeon

racing with zeal

create a mystery

and while you’re at it, cook a meal

erase your history, and your family too.

 

Sunday, April 26, 2026

Time's Up

 Time’s Up

 

Go ahead

Figure it out

The world is waiting.

Hell, I’m waiting

When I should be 

Solving the current existential crisis

While I get my pedicure

What color will it be this month

Make me blue, Make me blush

Hush, whisper me a prayer, 

No,  it’s Sardonic, and I know it.

What are you doing during this political unrest?

Are you shopping or rallying

Dilly or dallying, 

Silly Sally, make me a rhyme

Rhyme it with time, before I get behind

Or become resigned to my fate.

The Mad Hatter is running backwards in circles

While looking at his pocket watch

He’s going to crash, wait—into that gate.

Yup, like I said, it’s fate.

 

 

Saturday, April 25, 2026

Shopping For A New Golf Shirt

 Shopping For A New Golf Shirt

 

So the objective is simple: convince twelve women to buy the same golf shirt. This activity has historically required a treaty, a mediator, and at least one witness protection program.

 

“Does it come in sleeveless? Long sleeve? Possibly… no sleeve but also a jacket?”

“What kind of fabric is it made of? Because my skin has opinions.”

“Is it moisture-wicking? Or is it the kind that holds onto sweat like it’s a cherished family heirloom?”

“I like the motif.”

“I think I have earrings to match. If I don’t, I will acquire them. This is now a mission.”

“Thirty dollars is cheap.”

“Thirty dollars is suspicious. What’s it doing for that price? Who is it working for?”

“Is it roomy or boxy? I want ‘effortless’—not ‘moving day.’”

“Tight in the chest? Because I’m here to golf, not to test a zipper’s will to live.”

“Does it make my back look fat?”

“Nothing makes your back look fat. But fluorescent lighting in dressing rooms should be illegal.”

“I love pink.”

“I don’t love pink.”

“Can we change the flamingos to ibis? I’m trying to look ‘sporty coastal,’ not ‘escaped lawn ornament.’”

“The pattern is good.”

“The pattern is too busy.”

“Busy patterns hide faults.”

“Oh, I don’t care—”

“—so long as the fabric doesn’t make me sweat.”

“I heat up easily.”

“I don’t.”

“I’m always cold.”

“How about the one with the flowers?”

“What flowers—lilies?”

“No, the orchids. Remember? The ones that look expensive and slightly judgmental.”

“It comes in different colors, too.”

And then—miracle of miracles—two of us reach for the same one at the same time. We freeze. We stare. We laugh. “Okay,” someone says, “if we both like it, it’s basically a scientific fact.” Twelve credit cards tap in unison, the cashier blinks twice, and just like that, we’ve achieved world peace… in matching shirts.

 

Friday, April 24, 2026

To The Man In The Red Cap

 To the Man in the Red Cap

 

When was the last time you opened a newspaper—

or have you only heard the world through a feed that flatters you?

Your candidate isn’t whiffing—

he’s doing what grifters do—until the room decides to breathe together.

An emperor in a rented costume, fraying at the seams,

a con man scraping the barrel—until the crowd stops calling it a feast—

even your side can see him. Seeing is where change begins.

 

Congress is in session—

The tide can turn.

They’ll read the script and miss their cues—but the crowd can rewrite the ending.

not to save anyone—unless we build saving into law, into care, into daily habit.

Keep your victory lap; I’m saving my breath for the long haul—and I’m not alone.

The party ends when we stop dancing to whatever they play—and start making our own.

It’s over like that spotless red cap—

a stain pretending it’s a flag—until you choose to take it off.

bright enough to spot in a crowd—plain enough to put down and walk on.

 

Maybe it’s too much to fit in your head:

history doesn’t repeat—it waits for permission, and we can refuse.

“Not again,” we say—then we practice: we show up, we speak up, we stay.

So it doesn’t happen—because we choose each other, in plain sight.

I still remember the stories

my uncle used to tell—so we’d know what to name, and what to stop feeding.

How he served in a U-boat’s belly,

pulled into duty before his voice had even changed,

at fourteen—still a child, treated like inventory.

Kids shouldn’t have to learn the world that way. If we remember, they won’t.

 

 

Thursday, April 23, 2026

Earth Day

 Earth Day

I believe the planet will need more than one day to recover.

But Mother Earth thanks you—

truly.

If the dinosaurs were still alive,

they’d send a card.

The bees would sign it. In theory.

The endangered fish in the oceans

would also like to say thanks—

for buying that bracelet made from recycled plastic.

It was a choke hazard.

It’s still a choke hazard—

but now there’s a little less of it drifting around

those plastic junk islands.

Also, birds can still get those tiny, tragic hula hoops

wrapped around their necks. You’ve seen it.

This lonely planet thanks you.

She thinks it’s a great idea to send kids out

to pick up the garbage their parents toss out of cars.

There’s hope for tomorrow—

apparently.

People are so smart.

I’ll bet they can come up with even more ways

to recycle their own waste.

The Earth has a few ideas too.

 

But she’s a mom, so she won’t ruin your day.

She’ll just mention—casually—

her bowels have been straining for some time now.

She has a terrible itch that needs scratching.

It might shake a few people up.

 

Also, her disposition is shifting by the day.

Moody enough that the forecast keeps hedging.

It’s fine. It’s probably fine.

 

And the holes in her ozone layer are massive.

 

So yes—keep up the good work. 

Please send more debris into orbit in space.

She’ll be right here, holding her breath.

 

Wednesday, April 22, 2026

Training

 Training 

I laugh, looking back.

The years speed up—

Florida traffic when the snowbirds arrive.

Red lights feel optional—unless you remember you’re in one. I’ve seen enough to strip the naiveté from faith.

Crashes—car parts flung in a wide, bright ring of road. A debris field like the war my mother saw at five: waking to sirens, running in nightclothes, my grandmother scooping up five children and saying, now.

My shoulders are broad—

one of my better features—

as I round the corner of 69.

No one notices—until you’re treading water in the Gulf and need something to hold you up.

Yes, we were immigrants. I became a U.S. citizen in Honolulu forty years ago. We came by plane, sponsored by family; I was an infant in my mother’s arms while Germany still counted the cost of war.

I got a chance at a better life—better than my mama had. The man I married was a brute: brilliant, cruel. I loved him. I loathed him. He showed me the world and taught me to fight for my place in it. Years went by, soldiering on. Still, I learned: keep your head, keep moving, and don’t let the wreckage be the end of you.

Tuesday, April 21, 2026

Chasing Hope

 Chasing Hope

 

I try to catch up—

to the woman climbing the hill ahead of me,

the same rise of pavement I swear remembers our footsteps.

She’s there most mornings—steady as a sunrise,

moving with a brisk, practiced stride that doesn’t waste breath.

Her outfit matches the season—

light layers when the air still holds onto night, a brighter shirt when the day turns bold,

good shoes, a cap pulled low, a water bottle that catches the sun like glass.

She’s sensibly dressed for the climb, for sweat, for weather that changes its mind.

And still—she carries a smile the whole way,

as if she knows something kind about the day before the day has proven it.

I want to meet her, not just follow her shape up the slope—

to fall into step beside her, where conversation feels easy and unforced.

But she rounds the bend the way certainty does—

one clean turn, and she’s gone, swallowed by trees and distance.

The neighbor’s dog barks as I pass—sharp and sudden—guarding the invisible border of “too late.”

I picture the talks we might have if I ever caught her—

politics, sure—spoken softly, as you do with strangers before they become neighbors,

current events that arrive on screens overnight and feel different in morning air,

the weather—humidity, wind, the first hint of rain—small forecasts we can test.

Maybe she’d tell me her name and laugh at how long it took me to ask.

Maybe I’d admit I’m still learning how to begin—how to step forward without an excuse.

Hope, I realize, looks a lot like someone who keeps walking even when no one is watching.

Maybe I should jog, let my breath turn ragged for a minute, just to close the gap.

Maybe I should get up earlier, when the streetlights are still on, and the world feels unfinished.

Maybe I’ll meet her tomorrow—at the start of the hill, before the bend decides for me.

 

 

 

Monday, April 20, 2026

Pulling Weeds

 Pulling Weeds

Takes dedication—

effort, time management,

and self-discipline (the unglamorous kind).

The payoff usually shows up as blisters,

a few bruises, and the occasional puncture wound.

Plus deep-knee bends, squats,

ducking under the prickly bushes.

The result is rewarding—

but limited to the growth hours left in this season.

 

Leadership

 

It seems

doesn’t ask for any of that.

Unless you count sleeplessness,

ranting in the wee hours,

collecting enemies (including faith leaders),

choosing a gift for the dictator’s

birthday party,

starting wars, grabbing oil,

suing the government, and cutting deals

which, for some, is apparently easy.

Go team.

No kneepads required. 

Sunday, April 19, 2026

Calm After The Storm

 Calm After The Storm

Today we awaken—
soft light trembling on our faces—
First, to absorb the hush of shock,
emotions streaming from tired eyes,
hands worn by the trials behind us,
unable to summon applause,
even as triumph calls.
Yet still, we rise.

We rise, we rise—
from shadows into light,
with hope reborn at dawn,
our hearts unbowed, our spirits strong.
Through every storm,
still, we rise—
to greet the day,
to claim the calm we’ve won.

 

In the hush,
we find the seeds of hope,
rest in the gentle shade of renewal,
witness what we have become—
then softly, surely, declare:
we have won.

We rise,
trampled and battered,
with storms at our side—
to the left, to the right—
still, we rise.

We rise, we rise—
from shadows into light,
with hope reborn at dawn,
our hearts unbowed, our spirits strong.
Through every storm,
still, we rise—
to greet the day,
to claim the calm we’ve won.

 

We pray to the sun for light to guide us,
then to the son for hope to rise within.
We lay down the weight of oppression,
conquer the beast of despair,
gather in the circle of survival,
and greet the new dawn we have won.

 

We rise, we rise—
from shadows into light,
with hope reborn at dawn,
our hearts unbowed, our spirits strong.
Through every storm,
still, we rise—
to greet the day,
to claim the calm we’ve won.

Saturday, April 18, 2026

Rewarding Bad Behavior


Reeks

Like a game of thrones.

It throws the innocent from the turret

A witness to incest and lies.

And then cries like a crocodile.

Tears washed in blood and bile.

We crown the cruel with laurel—smile,

And dress their damage up as style;

We pay in praise for practiced guile,

And call the bruising all ‘worthwhile.’

We stack up perks in a shining pile,

While quiet decency lives in exile;

Then scold the ones who name it vile—

As if the truth should stand on trial.

...

So let it stink this tilted scale,

Till justice learns its tone.

Friday, April 17, 2026

GOD is an Ancient Alien

 

 

The rivalry fades—
science and faith,
their contest a shadow
beneath cosmic signs.

 

Ancient wisdom speaks:
Darwin’s distant god,
the zeal of holy wars,
words shimmering, shifting,
visions conscripting the mind.

 

Scriptures etched by divine hand
challenge chaos, command order;
yet we gaze across the span
of humankind’s unfolding,
seeking the wisdom sown
in primordial seeds.

 

Darkness whispers probabilities—
a reconciling reality
where bibles and theories meet,
where old truths and new questions
find common ground.

 

Can reason unmask
the mysteries time has veiled?
Perhaps the answer waits
where logic and wonder entwine,
in the mathematics of ancient belief.

 

Thursday, April 16, 2026

Vog Sunrise


Scarlet sun slices,
ebony frame—
Iwa birds dazzling,
violet lilies in the rain.

Orange heat breathes,
banyan’s crown aglow,
dew on emerald leaves,
morning’s gentle flow.

Beautiful, beautiful—
but unlike fog,
this haze is born of fire,
its breath is sharp and strong.

Vog glows in the morning,
brilliance in the sky,
but beneath its silent shimmer
a beauty that can burn—
where fog only softens the dawn.

 

 

Wednesday, April 15, 2026

Rowing

 Rowing

 

Come, row with me—

my small boat cutting through the restless sea;

Two blades, one rhythm—chase

that far-off beach beyond the break.

We’re strong; we lean into the swell—

it won’t be long if we don’t let it win.

We’ll take that shore like treasure—paired.

 

Climb in—

our canoe waits, bow pointed true.

Let’s shove off—water slaps the hull—

into Kāneʻohe Bay—water clear as glass over coral heads,

to the sandbar—where rays stitch shadows in the shallows—then farther.

And swear this vow:

hold fast to each other,

through wind that tries to spin us broadside,

through squalls that drum the deck,

through reef-pass surge, where the tide grabs hard and lets go.

Our oars bite, surge, and flash—silver schools scattering below—

stroke for stroke—threading the reef, watching turtles rise and dip—

on the blue edge past the reef, where deep water begins,

until the coastline lifts out of salt and storm—ours.

 

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The Saturday Cat Council

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