April Weavings

It’s spring and the spider
outside the window is back.
When I walk I see the couples
holding hands
while I pocket mine.

It’s spring and the couples
smile at each other.
When I enter my new home
I feel the silence
and walk again to the window.

I watch the outside spider
inside this trickster spring.
Who are you here? I ask
as I have no one
holding my hand.

Cross-posted at https://open.substack.com/pub/joanvinallcox/p/april-weavings?r=oj9j7&utm_campaign=post&utm_medium=web which includes an audio version.

Winter Twilight

From The Winter of Listening in David Whyte’s Essentials

So let this winter
of listening
be enough
for the new life
I must call my own.
The grey mauve of twilight 
clouds the approach
of darkness
as I watch and wait.

Change gestating within hope:
Advent’s promise
teases me with the solstice’s
diminishment of darkness.

I pray to be more
capable of creating
light
before the darkness.

On Turning 80

I wrote this piece the last day of my seventh decade, and on my following birthday. 

Tomorrow I will be 80. This is the first time I find myself approaching a birthday, even a decade birthday, with a kind of trepidation: the odds are that I won’t reach my next decade birthday. I might, but I quite possibly won’t. It’s hard to take in, but I want to live with the awareness that I am mortal, that I will die.. I want to feel my time left. I want to contribute, I don’t know exactly what, what I can, even in a limited way. I want to receive and create; joy comes from that, and I’m greedy for love and joy in the time I have left. 

I certainly didn’t think of 70 as the beginning of a final decade for my husband or for me, but it was for him. I’m so glad we had a party for his 70ᵗʰ, as he wanted. When he offered me one for my 70th, I refused it. I find, now, for this birthday, I’m happy for recognition on the excuse of having a “significant” birthday. I’m glad to be seen now. I’m grateful to have a daughter, friends, and many happy (or learning) memories as I go forward. 

On this the final day of my Seventh Decade, It’s cloudy and cold. The geese are honking and only the evergreens show colour amongst the bare trees. Looking back I see I was born at an advantageous time in a peaceful land with much to enjoy and be grateful for. Even the wounds i endured were opportunities to learn. Now, blanketed by my choices, I ease towards the time I’ll no longer be.

I see the streams of car lights and the Christmas lights on the houses and in the park. I am finding my birthday eve not very happy despite emails from friends. My arm and shoulder ache. I’m missing my husband and sad.


When I turned 80, on my actual birthday, I  ended up enjoying myself. The weather was bright, and I felt more positive. While I was getting my breakfast, my daughter danced out of her bedroom playing the Beatles and singing along to “Today it’s your birthday!” She gave me 2 cards, one a joke and the other sweet, plus a gift. I also got lots of greetings, some because she posted my birthday and age on Facebook. And a new friend gave me some champagne.

Once again, I learned that feelings shift, that life is constant change. I am 80, and still learning how to live.

Encountering Grief – Excerpt 3

In this busy rational world, how do we recognize our own feelings? When my life companion, my husband of 52 two years, the father of our daughter, was diagnosed with a fatal cancer I just kept on. Like Gladys Knight and the Pips sang, I just “kept on keeping on”. And when he died, I continued the same way – except I was upset that I felt so numb, that I wasn’t grieving, as I imagined grieving to happen. I found myself struggling at journalling but I kept pulsing out strange poems, poems that I came to realize were my grieving coming out in strange ways. Then someone I knew, who had seen my poems on my blog, recognized them as grieving and suggested she write prayers to speak to each poem, and that we put together a book.

Encountering Grief in poetry and prayer is published on Amazon

Excerpt 3 - Difficult Awakening

On the day I wake,
still on my side but
stretching into
the centre of our bed,
I notice I no longer
listen
for kitchen sounds
or the key
opening the door.

Knowing I am attuned
to being alone
is the loss
that feels like a betrayal -
as though I have accepted
your absence.

Encountering Grief – Excerpt 1 –

I am sharing excerpts from Gill’s and my just-published collection of poems and prayers dealing with grief, Encountering Grief – https://www.amazon.com/dp/1999164865 – also in other markets

When I Lost Myself

I am extinct.
No part of me goes forward.
I am ashes
underground.

My stories silenced.
My mutating memories
dismissed.
My sorrows and joys erased:
blankness bracketing grief.

Encountering Grief is available on Amazon.

We hope it provides comfort and understanding.