May all of our spines be flowers.

Pithos
Climb
into a jar
and live
for a while.
Chill earth.
No stars
in this stone
sky.
You have ceased
to ache.
Your spine is
a flower.
—Rita Dove from Selected Poems, Vintage, 1993
May all of our spines be flowers.

Climb
into a jar
and live
for a while.
Chill earth.
No stars
in this stone
sky.
You have ceased
to ache.
Your spine is
a flower.
—Rita Dove from Selected Poems, Vintage, 1993
I drew this morning in an incredible garden. I felt guilty that I was not at a demonstration. Every leaf, every flower, reminded me what it is to be alive, not to think, but to sprout, to feel, to search for a place, a bed, or the space between a rock and a hard place.

Passage
Every leaf that falls
never stops falling. I once
thought that leaves were leaves.
Now I think they are feeling,
in search of a place—
someone’s hair, a park bench, a
finger. Isn’t that
like us, going from place to
place, looking to be alive?
—Victoria Chang, “Passage” from The Trees Witness Everything, copyright © Copper Canyon Press, 2022.
When I am trying to name my pots I search the back of my mind for a shape association. It’s like trying to name an unresolved riddle that I can’t quite put my finger upon. When I began making these shapes I thought of them as caterpillars, reminiscent of a pot I made in the seventh grade. That was a time when I made things based on owls or hippos. These days I work more on the edge of meaning. I am coming to associate these forms with garden pods or turtle shells.

William Kentridge:
“The works by other artists that I keep coming back to have an unresolved riddle, or something at the edge of meaning you can’t quite put your finger on. I remember as a child in our house, there was a print of a Cézanne painting in the dining room with a line of paint on the side of a road, and I couldn’t tell — was that the edge of a drain coming into the road through the wall, or was it a person or a shadow of a person? The brain cannot stop trying to make sense of it.”
—William Kentridge Reflects on What It Means to Be a South African Artist, by Kate Guadagnino, excerpt from a New York Times article in T Magazine, June 9, 2025
Last night just before I wound down for bed I walked outside in search of the moon. I cheered on seeing fireflies. I studied our tall trees. My mind stretched beyond the fields. I noted the windows of our house, but no moon was yet visible.

Standing outside
staring at a tree
gentles our eyes
We cheer
to see fireflies
winking again
Where have our friends been
all the long hours?
Minds stretching
beyond the field
become
their own skies
Windows doors
grow more
important
Look through a word
swing that sentence
wide open
Kneeling outside
to find
sturdy green
glistening blossoms
under the breeze
that carries us silently
–Naomi Shihab Nye, excerpt from Every day as a wide field, every page
When I began doing these seasonal series I used the alphabet and bits from my childhood dictionary as prompts to create collaged images. So, it’s no wonder that I was drawn to a project that Alex Dimtrov did in 2012 where he posed 26 questions, one for each letter of the alphabet. His goal was to write poems that were portraits of people he did not know. But instead of poems he made collages. He also read more than he wrote. I similarly give myself assignments as a way to keep going, to keep asking questions, to keep putting things in my pots, and to keep taking photos.

Poem for the Reader
Since we’ll likely never be together
anywhere but here — what season
are you most alive in?
Is the morning blue or green?
How would you use freedom?
What part of your body do you trust the least?
Permanent rain or never-ending snow?
When are your most difficult hours?
Would you want to know who you were
before this? Why or why not?
And now that there’s fire —
the bridge or the river?
More money or love?
Do you sometimes avoid happiness?
If asked, would you return?
To Earth or anywhere else?
–Alex Dimitrov, on his Substack, The Reader
I did an online yoga class this morning. The teacher is the sister of an old friend. I enjoyed her view into familiar poses. As we balanced in tree pose I studied my back deck and the beech tree beyond. I noticed not only the marigolds in my outdoor pots, but a crow balanced in a branch.

A crow flew into the tree outside my window.
It was not Ted Hughes’s crow, or Galway’s crow.
Or Frost’s, Pasternak’s, or Lorca’s crow.
Or one of Homer’s crows, stuffed with gore,
after the battle. This was just a crow.
That never fit in anywhere in its life,
or did anything worth mentioning.
It sat there on the branch for a few minutes.
Then picked up and flew beautifully
out of my life.
–Raymond Carver, this poem appeared in All of Us: The Collected Poems by Raymond Carver, published by Vintage Books, 1996.
I am often afraid of being stuck in ruts and repeating myself. I fear that I use the same plant material over and over each season. I try not to repeat the same shape or backdrop, but this afternoon as I wandered in my garden I thought, maybe there is value to mining what comes naturally, that which is in my own backyard.

While she [Ruth Asawa] was at Black Mountain College, she confessed to her mentor Josef Albers, that she wanted to paint flowers instead of pursuing the more formal, abstract work popular at the time. He told her, “You can paint flowers, but make sure that they’re Asawa flowers.”
–From a wonderful commentary by Wendy MacNaughton in her Draw Together newsletter. The quote comes from an oral history interview with Ruth Asawa and her husband, Albert Lanier, June 21-July 5, 2002 (Archives of American Art, Smithsonian Institution).
I taught a workshop this weekend. As I prepared, I revisited my established ideas of making, some rules of thumb, along with recent inspirations. There are so many jumping off points to hone one’s own voice. We are lucky if we get to let it bloom.

“I was a late bloomer. But anyone who blooms at all, ever, is very lucky.”
–Sharon Olds commenting on publishing her first book of poems at age 38.
See a description at The Writer’s Almanac (last section)
Placing flowers in my pots, arranging them on backdrops, and taking photographs creates a conversation with my pottery, a dialog that leads to future variations in form and surface.

“Writing is a conversation with reading; a dialogue with thinking.”
–Nikki Giovanni, quote from her book, Racism 101
I often buy my own flowers. Warren knows I love them but it is not his language. Recently, when we went to the grocery store together he reminded me to look at the flowers but I said, “No, now is the season of flowers in our garden or at the farmers market.” But then, as we stood in line to check out, I really admired the peonies the man in front of us was buying. So I went back and treated myself to the moon-like peonies.

I want to tell you something. This morning
is bright after all the steady rain, and every iris,
peony, rose, opens its mouth, rejoicing. I want to say,
wake up, open your eyes, there’s a snow-covered road
ahead, a field of blankness, a sheet of paper, an empty screen.
Even the smallest insects are singing, vibrating their entire bodies,
tiny violins of longing and desire. We were made for song.
I can’t tell you what prayer is, but I can take the breath
of the meadow into my mouth, and I can release it for the leaves’
green need. I want to tell you your life is a blue coal, a slice
of orange in the mouth, cut hay in the nostrils. The cardinals’
red song dances in your blood. Look, every month the moon
blossoms into a peony, then shrinks to a sliver of garlic.
And then it blooms again.
–Barbara Crooker, “Listen,” from Line Dance,
copyright © 2008 Word Poetry.