Love in Haiku
For Paul
by Robin Shwedo
©: Robin Shwedo, 2007
I dream of your touch,
love of my life, gone too soon.
Some day, I’ll join you.
I’ve always loved you;
we both know I always will.
Your love is still here,
keeping me alive.
Our love is what warms me still,
our love never fades.
Though winter brings death,
I feel your warmth on the breeze,
loving me always.
Written well after a loved-one's death. Part of Painted Words, which should be ready for a publisher in the next few months.
Poetry, Unassigned
Friday, April 18, 2025
Thursday, April 17, 2025
WORDS UNSPOKEN
WORDS UNSPOKEN
by Robin Shwedo
©: Robin Shwedo, 1986
Grandma spoke a lot.
"Marie is doing better today."
"Oh?" I ask into the long-distance line,
static crackling and snapping,
"Was she ill?"
"Just a cold."
Grandma spent the springs with us.
By then, the snow was old.
"I need a change."
Which meant, "I'd love to see you."
She'd buy the kids clothes,
giving them out,
watching the smiles.
"Look, Mom, Granny gave us jelly shoes!
Baseball mitts!" Whatever the
occasion said.
"It's only money," she'd reply,
eyes sparkling.
The look said love.
As relations drifted,
shifted,
changed,
she alone said,
"If you love him, stay.
But if you love him better apart,
go.
It's up to you. Alone."
Meaning, "I'll love you either way."
The last spring,
the last week,
she said,
"You'll love being alone again.
You'll love having your own space;
to see me go."
This after a tense afternoon,
us dancing back and forth,
stomach in knots.
"You'll be glad to be home,"
I replied.
"Trips are nice; so's home."
She smiled;
I did, too.
Air cleared,
we came to a loving,
uneasy,
funny tender
truce.
December,
she began talking trips.
"March'll be here soon," she stated,
the line dancing with distance.
"So will you," I replied.
"How's Marie?"
"Better today."
"See you soon."
"Definitely. In March."
"March."
The phone clicked off and,
for a moment,
I listened to the
thin, faraway sound
on the line.
March came,
along with the mail.
"Your Grandmother wanted you to have this,"
said the note inside the box.
Her wedding ring -
initials inside, a date.
"She always spoke of you with love."
Marie had signed the note.
Written shortly after my grandmother's death in 1986. This is part of Love, Feelings and the Seasons of Life, which is looking for a publishing home.
by Robin Shwedo
©: Robin Shwedo, 1986
Grandma spoke a lot.
"Marie is doing better today."
"Oh?" I ask into the long-distance line,
static crackling and snapping,
"Was she ill?"
"Just a cold."
Grandma spent the springs with us.
By then, the snow was old.
"I need a change."
Which meant, "I'd love to see you."
She'd buy the kids clothes,
giving them out,
watching the smiles.
"Look, Mom, Granny gave us jelly shoes!
Baseball mitts!" Whatever the
occasion said.
"It's only money," she'd reply,
eyes sparkling.
The look said love.
As relations drifted,
shifted,
changed,
she alone said,
"If you love him, stay.
But if you love him better apart,
go.
It's up to you. Alone."
Meaning, "I'll love you either way."
The last spring,
the last week,
she said,
"You'll love being alone again.
You'll love having your own space;
to see me go."
This after a tense afternoon,
us dancing back and forth,
stomach in knots.
"You'll be glad to be home,"
I replied.
"Trips are nice; so's home."
She smiled;
I did, too.
Air cleared,
we came to a loving,
uneasy,
funny tender
truce.
December,
she began talking trips.
"March'll be here soon," she stated,
the line dancing with distance.
"So will you," I replied.
"How's Marie?"
"Better today."
"See you soon."
"Definitely. In March."
"March."
The phone clicked off and,
for a moment,
I listened to the
thin, faraway sound
on the line.
March came,
along with the mail.
"Your Grandmother wanted you to have this,"
said the note inside the box.
Her wedding ring -
initials inside, a date.
"She always spoke of you with love."
Marie had signed the note.
Written shortly after my grandmother's death in 1986. This is part of Love, Feelings and the Seasons of Life, which is looking for a publishing home.
Wednesday, April 16, 2025
DRIVING HOME ON A RAINY DAY
DRIVING HOME ON A RAINY DAY
by Robin Shwedo
©: Robin Shwedo, 1995
Driving home from a four hour trip,
the gray sky opens up
and delivers the deluge it has been promising
all afternoon.
Wouldn't be so bad
if it hadn't started
shortly before crossing the bridge.
It's not the driving that depresses me
so much as all the gray:
the steel girders,
the pavement,
the choppy gray water beneath even that,
as well as the sky with its varying shades of gray.
Even the profusion of white, gray and beige cars
lend to the somber mood.
The only color around me
is the electric blue car ahead of me,
seeming garishly out of place.
Finally reaching land,
I search out my gray exit
with its darker gray and black trees.
Finding it amidst the rain,
I turn, then,
slowly heading home.
This was written during a time when I had family in another part of Florida. Once a week, I'd take time off for a visit, then head home. One dreary winter afternoon, the skies opened up, letting loose the rains it had been promising most of the day.
This is part of my book titled Poetry Unassigned, which is looking for a publishing home.
by Robin Shwedo
©: Robin Shwedo, 1995
Driving home from a four hour trip,
the gray sky opens up
and delivers the deluge it has been promising
all afternoon.
Wouldn't be so bad
if it hadn't started
shortly before crossing the bridge.
It's not the driving that depresses me
so much as all the gray:
the steel girders,
the pavement,
the choppy gray water beneath even that,
as well as the sky with its varying shades of gray.
Even the profusion of white, gray and beige cars
lend to the somber mood.
The only color around me
is the electric blue car ahead of me,
seeming garishly out of place.
Finally reaching land,
I search out my gray exit
with its darker gray and black trees.
Finding it amidst the rain,
I turn, then,
slowly heading home.
This was written during a time when I had family in another part of Florida. Once a week, I'd take time off for a visit, then head home. One dreary winter afternoon, the skies opened up, letting loose the rains it had been promising most of the day.
This is part of my book titled Poetry Unassigned, which is looking for a publishing home.
Tuesday, April 15, 2025
PASSION AND A GOOD MAN
PASSION AND A GOOD MAN
by Robin Shwedo
©: Robin Shwedo, 1995
I want Passion and a good man.
Yes, I know that seems
a contradiction in terms,
but that is what I want.
And yet,
when I think of Passion,
I think of colorful men -
in blue jeans and flannel,
who clean up nicely,
dressing up in Armani suits,
or brightly good shirts and suede jackets,
but still colorful in their passion,
men who are the male equivalent of a “wild woman”,
who have no fear of
tender candle-lit dinners on the beach
under the stars,
the waves crashing nearby,
followed by a night of
exhausting
exhilarating passion.
And yet,
these are the same ones
who seem destined to walk in the morning,
heading out the door,
no questions or explanations.
Flip side
are the good men,
the ones with the eager smiles
and have-to-please-you attitudes,
who tell you what giving you an hour-long back rub
would be their pleasure,
and that they wouldn’t try “anything else”,
their boyish smiles
and clean-cut demeanor too good to be true.
A woman knows she can trust him to Do Right,
keeping her safe,
without leaving her in the morning.
But what I really want is Passion and a Good Man.
If I ever find him...
This is part of my book of poetry Revolutionary Broads and Other Nightmares, which is looking for a publisher.
I wrote this poem while driving cab for a living. One of my male co-workers once asked me and another female driver what women wanted in a man. This was the answer, in a light-hearted way. Of course, there's more, but it was a start.
by Robin Shwedo
©: Robin Shwedo, 1995
I want Passion and a good man.
Yes, I know that seems
a contradiction in terms,
but that is what I want.
And yet,
when I think of Passion,
I think of colorful men -
in blue jeans and flannel,
who clean up nicely,
dressing up in Armani suits,
or brightly good shirts and suede jackets,
but still colorful in their passion,
men who are the male equivalent of a “wild woman”,
who have no fear of
tender candle-lit dinners on the beach
under the stars,
the waves crashing nearby,
followed by a night of
exhausting
exhilarating passion.
And yet,
these are the same ones
who seem destined to walk in the morning,
heading out the door,
no questions or explanations.
Flip side
are the good men,
the ones with the eager smiles
and have-to-please-you attitudes,
who tell you what giving you an hour-long back rub
would be their pleasure,
and that they wouldn’t try “anything else”,
their boyish smiles
and clean-cut demeanor too good to be true.
A woman knows she can trust him to Do Right,
keeping her safe,
without leaving her in the morning.
But what I really want is Passion and a Good Man.
If I ever find him...
This is part of my book of poetry Revolutionary Broads and Other Nightmares, which is looking for a publisher.
I wrote this poem while driving cab for a living. One of my male co-workers once asked me and another female driver what women wanted in a man. This was the answer, in a light-hearted way. Of course, there's more, but it was a start.
Monday, April 14, 2025
Salt Creek, St. Petersburg
Salt Creek, St. Petersburg
by Robin Shwedo
©: Robin Shwedo, 2011
Historical, varied, over-looked Salt Creek.
Saltwater waterway,
used for littering, garbage-dumping for too long.
Once pristine, now muck-filled,
wanting to become once-again – vibrant,
Vital
estuary
life-giving
ebb-and-flow
peaceful waterway.
“Watch out for sharks!”
Crabs, fish, pelicans
displaced by cans, ring-tops, litter,
to be (hopefully) replaced (again) by nature.
Wonder if Native Americans used this
as their water-highway?
The wind and currents steer us.
This was written on 2-10-11 for a Nature Writing class at the University of South Florida St. Petersburg, taught by Tom Hallock. It was a fun class, including a kayaking trip on Salt Creek, as well as writing.
When I took the class, a man standing on a bridge above the creek watched us paddling along, and hollared, "Watch out for the sharks!" Got a good laugh from all of us.
How good was the writing? There was even a book (Salt Creak Journal) published with some of the writing and photography, along with a release part.
Professor Hallock's Nature Writing class has moved on to other local waterways to write about.
This poem is part of a growing collection tentatively titled Painted Words.
by Robin Shwedo
©: Robin Shwedo, 2011
Historical, varied, over-looked Salt Creek.
Saltwater waterway,
used for littering, garbage-dumping for too long.
Once pristine, now muck-filled,
wanting to become once-again – vibrant,
Vital
estuary
life-giving
ebb-and-flow
peaceful waterway.
“Watch out for sharks!”
Crabs, fish, pelicans
displaced by cans, ring-tops, litter,
to be (hopefully) replaced (again) by nature.
Wonder if Native Americans used this
as their water-highway?
The wind and currents steer us.
This was written on 2-10-11 for a Nature Writing class at the University of South Florida St. Petersburg, taught by Tom Hallock. It was a fun class, including a kayaking trip on Salt Creek, as well as writing.
When I took the class, a man standing on a bridge above the creek watched us paddling along, and hollared, "Watch out for the sharks!" Got a good laugh from all of us.
How good was the writing? There was even a book (Salt Creak Journal) published with some of the writing and photography, along with a release part.
Professor Hallock's Nature Writing class has moved on to other local waterways to write about.
This poem is part of a growing collection tentatively titled Painted Words.
Sunday, April 13, 2025
DAY'S END
DAY’S END
by Robin Shwedo
©: Robin Shwedo, 2022
At a yellow brick building in Clearwater,
I wait for my final fare.
It’s been a long day,
but could’ve been longer,
had dispatch not cared about
paying overtime.
Thank God for small miracles and favors.
The building is a church.
A flash of thought –
did they use yellow bricks
to simulate the golden bricks
the roads in heaven are made of?
Probably not,
but a nice thought.
One never knows.
The stained glass windows,
in various shades of greenish-yellow,
with a dark green stripe around the edges
and a blue, purple and dark
– I don’t know – dark green?
black?
dark brown or blue? –
cross in the center of each,
are unlit from inside the church.
I know not where the choir practices inside,
only that,
when I come exactly on time,
my fare is waiting on the bench
I’m parked in front of.
She has only three minutes
by my estimation
(and car clock)
before we’re exactly on time;
she’s still not here.
Two minutes now.
The church’s security guard
has already wandered by,
checking out my car
from a discreet distance
before going back to his post inside;
he can see me from his window.
That’s okay;
I’m not leaving until I have my fare –
or she’s five minutes late.
It’s one minute past time
and here she comes.
“Hey,” she says,
sliding into the car.
We exchange pleasantries,
and head for our day’s end.
I drove cab for a number of years. The is loosely based on one ride that came my way once every week or two.
This is from my collection Working Class Poems, which is still growing before looking for a publisher.
by Robin Shwedo
©: Robin Shwedo, 2022
At a yellow brick building in Clearwater,
I wait for my final fare.
It’s been a long day,
but could’ve been longer,
had dispatch not cared about
paying overtime.
Thank God for small miracles and favors.
The building is a church.
A flash of thought –
did they use yellow bricks
to simulate the golden bricks
the roads in heaven are made of?
Probably not,
but a nice thought.
One never knows.
The stained glass windows,
in various shades of greenish-yellow,
with a dark green stripe around the edges
and a blue, purple and dark
– I don’t know – dark green?
black?
dark brown or blue? –
cross in the center of each,
are unlit from inside the church.
I know not where the choir practices inside,
only that,
when I come exactly on time,
my fare is waiting on the bench
I’m parked in front of.
She has only three minutes
by my estimation
(and car clock)
before we’re exactly on time;
she’s still not here.
Two minutes now.
The church’s security guard
has already wandered by,
checking out my car
from a discreet distance
before going back to his post inside;
he can see me from his window.
That’s okay;
I’m not leaving until I have my fare –
or she’s five minutes late.
It’s one minute past time
and here she comes.
“Hey,” she says,
sliding into the car.
We exchange pleasantries,
and head for our day’s end.
I drove cab for a number of years. The is loosely based on one ride that came my way once every week or two.
This is from my collection Working Class Poems, which is still growing before looking for a publisher.
Saturday, April 12, 2025
THE MOVE OF A FRIEND
THE MOVE OF A FRIEND
by Robin Shwedo
©: Robin Shwedo, 1987
Today, a friend of mine
is moving out of state.
We've both known for months about today,
the date marked on two calendars.
I've known her most of the four years she's been here.
We met during a critical time in our lives:
she was back in school, a mother of two,
I, newly separated, in a new house, with double the kids.
Fate had us go to the same park
for a Labor Day picnic.
Friends immediately,
fast, though maybe not too fierce.
We started out together,
once a week.
Then, somehow, it slowed
as other necessary commitments arose.
Once every six months,
we'd bump into each other
or call,
and catch up
as though our last contact was yesterday.
Yesterday,
we went out for an ice cream,
a needed break from packing for her,
a final time together for us both.
It felt a little funny;
I learned a lot from her,
picked up on her cues for the dance.
I hoped she learned, too, from me,
from my subtleties.
I felt betrayed, somehow, by her leaving.
She was the first friend I picked out
without a husband/parent overhead.
This morning,
I stand on my back porch, a cup of tea in hand.
This porch, house, I moved into a week after I met her.
A lot has happened.
We've talked of children -
we both had ones with major medicals,
so knew the nuances,
the doctors and problems,
pain in a shared way.
She gave me permission to go to school
with her example,
then moved on to a job she loved
that had nothing to do
with her unfinished schooling.
I watch the new grass coming up,
the delicate diamond glitter of dew on the new green.
I'll miss her,
betrayed or not.
Maybe now I'll have permission to move, too.
This was written shortly after a friend moved out of state. We exchanged letters for a year or two after her move, then slowly lost touch as our lives took over. Years later, we found each other again on Facebook. This comes from my book Poetry Unassigned.
by Robin Shwedo
©: Robin Shwedo, 1987
Today, a friend of mine
is moving out of state.
We've both known for months about today,
the date marked on two calendars.
I've known her most of the four years she's been here.
We met during a critical time in our lives:
she was back in school, a mother of two,
I, newly separated, in a new house, with double the kids.
Fate had us go to the same park
for a Labor Day picnic.
Friends immediately,
fast, though maybe not too fierce.
We started out together,
once a week.
Then, somehow, it slowed
as other necessary commitments arose.
Once every six months,
we'd bump into each other
or call,
and catch up
as though our last contact was yesterday.
Yesterday,
we went out for an ice cream,
a needed break from packing for her,
a final time together for us both.
It felt a little funny;
I learned a lot from her,
picked up on her cues for the dance.
I hoped she learned, too, from me,
from my subtleties.
I felt betrayed, somehow, by her leaving.
She was the first friend I picked out
without a husband/parent overhead.
This morning,
I stand on my back porch, a cup of tea in hand.
This porch, house, I moved into a week after I met her.
A lot has happened.
We've talked of children -
we both had ones with major medicals,
so knew the nuances,
the doctors and problems,
pain in a shared way.
She gave me permission to go to school
with her example,
then moved on to a job she loved
that had nothing to do
with her unfinished schooling.
I watch the new grass coming up,
the delicate diamond glitter of dew on the new green.
I'll miss her,
betrayed or not.
Maybe now I'll have permission to move, too.
This was written shortly after a friend moved out of state. We exchanged letters for a year or two after her move, then slowly lost touch as our lives took over. Years later, we found each other again on Facebook. This comes from my book Poetry Unassigned.
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