The silent house

I tip toe down the hall

into the kitchen

Trying not to make a sound

Attune to the noises

The steps that I take

Items I move

My God the coffee machine grinding beans is horrendously loud!

Having guests in the house

Acute awareness rises

A mirror shines on personal routines

It’s too early for normal people

I pretend to be a ghost

But my body feels heavy

It’s not at all convincing

I open the front door

Peer into the darkness

Sigh happily

Stars

The damp smell of grass

Rising

The stair is quiet

All heat from yesterday flown

I sit and think

As quiet as a mouse

Where does that term come from?

All the mice I have known are loud

Have you ever had a mouse in the room with you?

It grinds and crunches and leaps around the place

It’s dense furry body scrabbles on floorboards

Mice are noisy

So are Kate’s

But I can’t be late for the sun

I have this time to write and muse

Before the day is begun

And I guard it like gold

Fill it and let it fill me in return

It’s not the same restful quality of sleep

But the peace of untangling thoughts

Hearing myself talk

Understanding

To step outside of the subconscious ride that dreams provide

While the traces of that other world are still close by

The people who visit me there

The places I go

I don’t know

They only ask more questions

I prefer my own

So here I am

Sipping my loud coffee

I wonder if I’m odd?

And then don’t let the thought bother me

Of course I am

By age 50ish most humans are grown enough to be different and strange

Or else they have lost their minds

turned a basic shade of beige

Sawn off their corners

To fit with the rest

I, on the other hand

am a puzzle of my own

And I like my own company

The very best

*other people give us the opportunity to look in mirrors. Header photo – a track that leads to the right of where I normally walk in the mornings.

I do go down that way sometimes but it is very overgrown at the moment. It reminded me of routines and paths that we take and how we automatically choose the usual clear cut way most of the time, rather than the unknown or overgrown.

Everything is a metaphor.

Our whole lives are a metaphor.

But for what?

11 thoughts on “The silent house

  1. this was a pleASant surprise: a new poem by Kate. It held me all the way through for I too have a guest in the house for a week ; it’s a little disruptive and I get grumpy if I can’t get to my creative, quiet time. The mice section appealed to me. I thought you conjured it well. It was the last section where you wondered about your ‘oddness’ that really lifted the poem; yes, I think all creatives are a little odd, both in their appearance and their work— that is what makes us distinctive and alluring 🙂

  2. Wonderful! Strange how I can see myself in a “morning person”! Sometimes, I will walk out at night when Jeff’s asleep, to the edge of the back yard where it meets the woods just to hear the frogsong. Life is indeed metaphor. For what, you ask. Perhaps metaphor is life. That is to say art is what we live for, the essence of life. I recently learned about “trench art,” pieces created by soldiers in the worst of war conditions. I’ve also been fascinated by post-earthquake Haitian art. You often hear people say that art is a luxury that humans can achieve only after our basic survival needs are met. I think the history of art (visual and otherwise) defies this notion, and the existence of “trench art” proves it wrong. Art is a basic human need, a way of connecting to something deep within us, something without which we are mere shells. Inspiring post! Thanks!

Leave a Reply to Kate DuffCancel reply