Inspired by What do you see #293
quantifying time
experiences fill our days
life rushes us faster
our captured moments
take us back and slow us down
memories relived
Inspired by What do you see #293
quantifying time
experiences fill our days
life rushes us faster
our captured moments
take us back and slow us down
memories relived
Inspired by Reena’s Xploration Challenge #365 &
Moonwashed Weekly Prompt – Chroma
do choose pure intent
those always adding value
bright chroma beings
***NOTE – My friend, Shanon, introduced me to the term “Timewasters.” I’m happy to share her thoughts with a wider audience.
Redux
I can’t hold the present.
It’s slipping away,
lost to the past.
No stopping the future.
Originally published 12/19/2018 on I Write Her.
New Light
Cascading sunshine
Falls into my cloudy eyes
Cold ponds feel new light
Further Down
From the Pandemic’s
Depressing downs
Into my Covid’s
Dressing gown
Finality
after we have consumed
the leftover wine
and desecrated the sundial’s shadow
the dark side of the moon
will finally recede from view
Co-existence
Beneath the trees and bushes
Lives an underground network
Prospering on giving and receiving
Our Time
Time waits for no one
Everyone passes in time
Time hears no commands
~~~
Ivor Steven, formerly an Industrial Chemist and then a Plumber, is now retired; he has been published in numerous anthologies and online magazines. He has two self-published books, Tullawalla and Perceptions. Ivor is an active member of the Geelong Writers Inc.(Australia) and an appointed writer for Coffee House Writers magazine (USA). He was first featured in 2022 and was nominated for the 2022 Pushcart Prize for his piece – The Sum is One. You can read his features and reblog by clicking HERE.

If you’d like to be featured on The Short of It in the future,
click here for the submission guidelines.
All we have is time between birth and death. As I mentioned to Paul, “time is everything yet only truly held one moment at a time, it can be fleeting or like an eternity and each experience is unique.” Do make good use of it.
Present Turning by Laura Denise
footprints in the sand
headed to the sunset,
the present turning
to memories
with each leisurely step
time stands still
yet it doesn’t,
simultaneously
moving
while holding forever
the moment
no turning back
as history proceeds,
no undoing
impressions
once the pressure
is released
and the shape
is ingrained
indelibly
though the tide
may wipe
the slate clean
and the imprint
may no longer
be seen
only time
may be able to change
the feelings
what kind
of trail
are you leaving?
footprints in the sand
headed to the sunset,
the present turning
to memories
with each step
A Haiku for Time by Paul Vincent Cannon
days within all days
time quickly passes slowly
river laps my feet
the sun rising in the east, yet setting in the west
an ever occurring, unending beginning and end
a human’s course can fade and then begin to brighten
also ever occurring
but eventually lives end while others begin to live
we’re not on a continuum like the sun and the moon
time ticks by second by second
flowing into the next hour
as it leads one to days
days become weeks
weeks turn into years
and years eventually become our end
every being experiences
the components of time
but will they be blessed with romance
or suffer with strife
choosing to engage heartily in joyous emotions
or be reduced to overflowing tears
will they experience all things possible
mentally, physically and emotionally
in the journey they embark on
or will their life’s moments feel like a burden
in the seconds, hours, days, weeks and years
before time has run out

Inspired by Reena’s Exploration Challenge #172 – Components of Time
& Eugi’s Weekly Prompt – Romance
a path unchartered
multitude of outcomes
choose your time wisely
THE MIDNIGHT CELEBRATION
I’d rather it wasn’t the clock
that drinks with me.
I revile its stories, its jokes.
What do I care about the billions of years
it can go back
and the billions forward.
And it’s such a smarmy accent,
that “tick, tick, tick.”
But the clock it is,
on the wall, dresser,
cable box, shiny numbers
peering out of stove and microwave.
If I had my way,
my drinking companions would be
the youth turned twenty-one,
proudly showing everyone his license.
The young gun of thirty,
money in his pocket,
vice presidency in the bag.
Even the beer-gutted forty-year-old,
discussing big plans over imported ale.
It’s almost midnight,
the flat froth of another deadly day.
One bottle is finished,
another stakes out my thirst.
This isn’t the party I had planned.
I invited the times of my life
but time of year showed up instead.
WORK OUT
Hamper overflowing.
More clothes piled up at the end of the bed.
I’m in the cellar on the elliptical,
walking a mile or so in one place,
Dishes piled up in the sink,
the house is on its own.
But the man must trim those abs,
shrink that gut,
or everything falls apart.
When was the last time
the carpet saw a vacuum cleaner?
Dust lasts longer around here than calories.
My fitness machine squeaks
like tortured mice.
Windows, mirrors, lack for
a good arm wrestle with a wet cloth.
But I see myself in the bathroom scales.
I look out through how healthy I feel.
The roof is leaking.
I could be up there fixing it.
But if I’m to avoid hard work,
I first must have the strength.
ANATOMY OF A HUG
The wave’s motion.
We are moving.
Through the door in the morning.
These floors, so different from at night.
Sway with light like sown fields.
Gradually goes the soot-discharging fishing boat.
Your body leans on me for comfort.
With a mysterious whisper, I lean on you.
Today, when we clench hands,
tides roll in, those hands open up,
love is crystallized sand and grafted together.
Almost dull but blood flows freely.
Dreaming is easy.
Crossing over into vision is not.
A daybreak frontier
when it pays to hold our breath.
Knowing is anticipation.
Acting, a risky plunge.
A naked coastline
reinforces our dependence.
When love and sea
share the tumult inside us,
a single surge
nudges our way forward.
This startling landscape.
This water. Our fear.
This earth. Our support.
Here in the harbor, I hold you inside me.
Clean anchor
where all else pulls away.
BOY
September,
a slow drift from light and heat,
apples peaking,
trees giving up the green.
your boy turns 21.
lie’s a man
just as the planet
turns its back
on its own manhood,
no longer robust and clear
but reflective,
warm when the sun’s upon it,
but chilly come dark.
He’s out with his friends.
in a bar, ordering his first legal beer.
He’ll slay out later than the moon.
There’ll be women with
more claim on him than you.
Luckily, there’s always winter.
You’ll see more of him then,
his freedom not quite warm enough
as the usual bitter winds,
blinding drifts,
driving him indoors.
For a time, an old dead planet
can’t compete with your contemporaneous fire.
Poor mother flame –
he’ll be yours again
but seasonal.
HOW TO MAKE THE BEST OF IT
Let us walk forty years in the desert,
heat-struck, devastated,
forgetting to bring water.
forgetting who we are,
stumbling about
like coked-up porn queen
and impotent actor.
It gets no emptier –
just you and me,
a rattlesnake,
rat, lizard, nothing cute –
a cheap motel of a landscape,
a greasy fast-food meal
pecked apart by vultures.
We’re either bored or arguing.
So let’s reroute our lives.
Civilization just doesn’t go with our obsessions.
Too much to drink. To flush.
To rinse away dirt sins.
We need to be where it’s barren and defeating,
deadly in its indifference.
Occasionally, we’ll come across a bullock skull
from a rancher’s dream inverted.
That bone could be the two of us –
crumbling and healing.
A LESSON IN BIOLOGY
This velvet plant
venerates its stalk, its flowers,
casts off a spore to spread the word –
children skim its seed
from the fishpond –
wind thrashes it this way, that way,
from willow to mimosa –
it’s a mast with lantern
driving through November
to the unfriendly house –
faster, faster, ever more desperate,
stringing together moment and lives and fears –
a drop of dew on green apple
of breath on almonds and cheese –
then the picnic where
the ancient diva
adorns herself
with the succulent triple choker,
girdling her fleshy throne
more beautiful
for the cracks in her skin –
oh the sun – it is a jewel
she can almost wear on her finger –
meanwhile, a dream
frets itself to ruin –
too brittle for these atmospheres,
while the past she hordes like a delicate jade –
this scene suggests a dying light,
and a woman preciously inlaid.
~~~
John Grey is an Australian poet, US resident, recently published in Soundings East, Dalhousie Review and Connecticut River Review. Latest book, Leaves On Pages is available through Amazon. This is John’s second feature on The Short of It.

If you’d like to be featured on The Short of It, click here for the submissions guidelines.
That last line says it beautifully. Time is precious!
The problem is, we think we have time
We think we have time to create this fairytale version of our lives in our head that will never be a reality
We create our soulmates and our life plans without so much as brushing up on the real life facts ahead
We create relationships and friendships and enemies alike
We portray visions in our heads of the perfect family tree
But truth is, time is running out along with our distorted versions of what we live for
The trouble with time is we always think there’s more
When in fact it is the very opposite
Living second to second in a shadow that is ourselves
We make these storybook endings and spend so much time looking for them, that we waste precious time picking up pieces that were never there to begin
Time- both Everything and nothing
Yet priceless and the…
View original post 15 more words