February Poems
Love
I won’t count the ways They are too numerous After trying to avoid the subject for too long Love is not perfect It sometimes involves arguments It is sometimes hateful But it is enduring Nothing can erase it Nor diminish its power Not time Not distance Not ever
~ Stephanie Sloane, author of Dear Me: Poems of Loss, Grief, and Hope in New York’s Darkest Days
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Approaching Valentine’s Day
Not meant only for romantic love What about all the others we love? Those family and friends Who stand by us Through it all And help us navigate They are worth celebrating On Valentine’s Day And every other day
~ Stephanie Sloane, author of Dear Me: Poems of Loss, Grief, and Hope in New York’s Darkest Days
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Every Day is Valentine’s Day
Never expected you to come into my life Not the expecting type, more the accepting type We were not looking but we found each other Sharing dreams on the Belt Parkway Many have come true New York City sprinkled her magic around us Gently and quietly something special started Everything just fell into place nice and easy Stars sparkled and realigned You understand me better than I do myself You still do We jumped hurdles and healed broken hearts Still working on those in progress No matter what, no matter when, no matter who We climb mountains slowly and steadily Every moment for the rest of my days Whispers and hugs will calm the tears in the middle of the night It always ends up better not just alright Every day is Valentine’s day because you are my best friend the and the love of my life
~Madlyn Epstein Steinhart, author of Put Your Boots on and Dance in the Rain
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February 2021
My kitchen has 2 days left to its lifespan. On Election Day, which was also my birthday, all hell broke loose in the apartment above me when a brand new faulty plumbing part simply gave out. It split in 2, forcing the mighty copper part to burst through a wall and unleashed water raining down hard through my ceiling halogen lights for an entire hour. My friends immediately sent over 4 pints of Van Leeuwen ice cream. Now I am packing up everything I own and excavating through layers of the darkest gray city dust, to go through the forgotten history stored under my king size bed. Not only am I dumping charcoal nudes I drew in high school, my daughter’s red plastic Barbie Beetle car and Doug’s tax return from 1983, I am cleaning up after a devastating year. The extra weight of 2020 still bears down on us all. Tomorrow masked movers will come and pack up that which survived the purge. Doug and I will move temporarily into a building on the block I grew up on. In fact, several windows perfectly frame that tall, terraced building made famous on TV when The Jeffersons broke new ground and moved on up. I will buy groceries for 2 people. We will live alone again for the first time since the night we became parents. My nest is empty at last. After 10 months of sleeping in the same bed every night and staring at the same walls and floors, both before and after they buckled and remained damaged, I am happy to go anywhere. On Monday a fever-free construction crew will meet all Covid requirements and demolish the old engineered wood floors that supported us for more than 2 decades, as we grew into a family of 5. The kitchen that saw spilled milk, burnt baked cookies, so much broken glass and 3 months straight of family dinners during lockdown, will be razed in a mere day or 2. I get the luxury to recreate. We plan. We make changes. We rebuild. We refresh. We replace. We improve. We hope to return in the spring. We hope to be vaccinated. We hope to go to Julia’s college graduation. We know we will eventually come home and start the next chapter of the newest collective roaring ‘20s, and I should have much more shelf space for all that the future bestows on me.
~ Nicole Freezer Rubens, author of The Long Pause and the Short Breath…Poems & Photos & Reflections on New York City’s Pandemic
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Experience Is the Teacher
I have come to this conclusion: it is time to give back at this age, I am old enough to have turned another page, To share what I've learned for yet another stage, In this short, last quarter of my life. Where did all the time go, I always ask, As I come to the end of yet another day's task. It has slipped by so quickly I hardly noticed. Now's the time to share what I've learned, Or where is the pleasure of that which I've earned? The wisdom, the experience must now be taught, So that mistakes are avoided, the student not caught, In a web of issues to be avoided, not fought. This comes with showing up, lessons learned, I wish to pass on, the knowledge confirmed, Through mistakes, corrections, coming out of defeat, With head held up high, standing on two feet, Steady on the ground, hearing a strong heart beat, Is there a student ready to hear what I teach? It would give me much pleasure to outreach, That person willing to embrace, All I have to give, to share and face, The fact, that this will be my precious gift. To whom shall I give it to? That is the question I ask of you. Are you facing this dilemma too? Tell me, please, your point of view. I am listening.
~Carol Ostrow, author of Poems from My Pandemic Pen
Poetry is back in vogue and through The Three Tomatoes Book Publishing we have the honor of publishing books by four poets—Madlyn Epstein Steinhart, Stephanie Sloane, Nicole Freezer Rubens, and Carol Ostrow. Check out their poetry submissions each month.