All Poems, Birthdays, Invitations

Surprise Party

It was supposed to be a surprise party.

The one my cousin’s daughters organized for him.

By evite many months before his eightieth birthday.

But since it didn’t say surprise, guests told him they were coming.

Informing him of the event.

Which then became known as the surprise party.

Always mentioned with a knowing giggle.

See you at the surprise party!

Which, indeed, rolled around in May.

During unrelenting rain.

But, the house was a beacon.

Welcoming the wet and soggy.

A lighthouse, decorated for the occasion.

Filled with joyful faces, good will, abundant treats.

Old friends, new, children, siblings, nephews, nieces, cousins.

A hub of festivity.

Party hats and favors.

Introductions and catching up.

Harmonious conversations.

Inflating corners of every room.

The birthday boy, decked for the occasion.

Red sneakers, blue birthday ribbon, seventy sixer tee.

Antennae on head, slacks with multicolored design.

Setting a tone of fanciful gaiety.

Like the parties we used to throw for a child.

At five and eight and ten.

Just reversed.

Adult children making one for a parent.

Though the celebration let slip,

the girls still managed to amaze.

A cake with teenaged photo.

Memoir in print, Aaron’s essays.

 

Lynn Benjamin

May 5, 2024

All Poems, Invitations, People Traits, Wisdom

Meditation on Expectations

Expectations are often the crux of conflicts.

Between parents and children.

Teachers and students.

Committed couples.

All of us harbor them.

How could we have order without them?

How would society function?

We teach children to follow rules.

To become good citizens.

Teachers expect performance.

Partners expect the other to do a fair share.

And yet, how often do people complain that expectations stifle?

Thwart communication?

Sincere back and forth?

Is it possible to enter a space without expectation?

Desirable?

I don’t know.

For, I think, everyone has expectations.

Perhaps we can lower them.

Like diminishing intensity on a dimmer switch.

To soften the light.

Avoid disappointment.

But, all parties possess them.

Those wanting them lowered.

Those lowering.

So, maybe it’s more a matter of awareness.

Noticing when expectations exceed reason.

In truth, I rely on expectations.

I like to know what’s expected of me.

What I can expect of others.

Of myself.

Could I accept an invitation to abandon expectations?

I don’t think I could or would.

That invitation, I’d decline.

Just tell me yours; I’ll tell you mine.

Then we can be genuine.

 

Lynn Benjamin

April 15, 2024

All Poems, For Children, Invitations, Natural Beauty, Plants, Pleasure

Honeysuckle Vines

 

Honeysuckle vines creep over the fence.

The one behind my house.

White, yellow bonnets bob about.

Lips wide, tongues curled.

Diffusing lullabies for noses.

Soft, sweet, mellifluous.

Troubadours at annual May time fairs.

Humming olfactory tunes.

Harmonizing with winged accompanists.

Bees, hummingbirds, finches.

Soothing diners, walkers, gardeners.

Slumberers who leave windows ajar.

Satisfying squirrels, deer, rabbits.

Who seek dulcet desserts.

Come, come to the fence.

Where sound and scent meet.

Luscious liaison.

Listen well, and smell.

Let your eyelids flutter down.

Comfortable at rest.

Breathe in the floral music.

By honeyed songs caressed.

 

Lynn Benjamin

May 25, 2023

 

 

All Poems, Family, Health/Illness, Invitations, Natural Beauty, Spouses

Awaiting Surgery

 

Bob lies where I did some years ago.

Awaiting surgery to replace a lens.

In his right eye.

While outside, the day is generous.

Sun and shade.

I eschew the waiting room for a trail.

Green canopy along a stream.

Maples, pines, tulip poplars.

Dame rockets, wild, breathless.

Lavenders, whites, pinks.

Bold, tall, pushing into spaces.

Along banks, on hillsides.

Rambler roses exuding aromas.

Uninhibited, lusty, passionate.

Bluejays, yellow butterflies dipping, darting.

Woodpeckers working.

Chipmunks scurrying across the path.

I wished you by my side

to see the splendor of the park.

Though I know replacement lenses

will improve your vision sharp.

Another day we’ll go.

With new eyes traverse the trail.

Unseen textures, deeper hues.

Woodsy secrets to unveil.

 

Lynn Benjamin

May 27, 2023

 

 

 

All Poems, Argentine Family, Family, Gardens, Invitations, Spanish language

Una Invitación

 

Cuando estoy sola, solita en el huerto,
cuchicheo con ustedes,
mis primos argentinos.
Los invito a recoger las frutas,
las frutas de nuestra tierra.

Les hablo despacio en un castellano mío,
una mezcla de palabras y deseos de verlos.

Si vienen, mis primos,
si vienen a recoger la cosecha,
no tendré que hablar en cuchicheos
sino en canciones de alegría.

Y si vienen mis primos argentinos,
les hablaré en castellano suyo
porque mis deseos serán realidades.
Encontraré la gramática
y las palabras apropiadas
mientras comemos frambuesas y manzanas.

Les prepararé agua caliente
para tomar juntos el mate.
Charlaremos y nos reiremos
hasta los frutales queden vacíos
y nosotros llenos de frutos.

Lynn Benjamin
el 16 de octubre de 2005

We had a large vegetable and fruit garden at our house on Mayo Place. I wanted my Argentine cousins, Luisa and Raquel with their spouses, Osvaldo and Cisty, to come visit us there so we could share our produce and our love with them. Uriel, his sister, and his mother (Nora, daughter of Raquel) and father eventually did come to Mayo Place and enjoyed our vegetables and fruits.

 

All Poems, Anniversaries, Invitations

Please Join Us

 

Fifty years together.
In sickness and in health.
Living, loving, learning.
And reproducing wealth:

Four children and their partners,
offspring ten and two
invite you to a party
to celebrate anew.

A half-a-century romance.
Enduring bonds of gold.
Belief in the true value of
to have and to hold.

Pay tribute to this couple:
Leatrice and Sam Katz.
Kudos to you both.
From all, we tip our hats.

So, mark it on your calendar
to meet for champagne brunch.
12/1 at noon exactly.
Let’s laugh, and talk, and munch.

For a 50th anniversary
is a time to celebrate.
To sing a song, to write a rhyme.
To appreciate good fate!

Champagne Brunch on December 1st at 12:00 noon
12 Mayo Place, Dresher, PA
Bring a story, poem, or photo to share
No gifts please
RSVP by November 20th
Lynn (215) 646-7988
Sheryl (215) 658-0499

 

This invitation was for my parents’ fiftieth wedding anniversary which I made in our porch on Mayo Place. I thought of this occasion when Bob and I started to plan our own fiftieth wedding anniversary in 2020. Because of the pandemic, it ultimately came to pass in 2022 at the Ashbourne Center for the Arts.

All Poems, Emotions, Food, Humor, Invitations, Loss, Memories, Pandemic, Pleasure, Prose/memoir, Stories, Thank-You

I Like to Entertain

 

I like to entertain.
To plan a menu.
To prepare appetizers.
Amuse-bouches.
Salads.
Breads.
Mains.
Desserts.
Serve wines.
Decorate the room.
Flowers, maybe a balloon.
I relish the idea of inviting confidants from the past
to assemble at my house.
I would likely need several tables.
Maybe multiple leaves.
Placemats galore.
Flatware, every knife, fork, spoon, I own.
Napkins, plates, stemware.
A little background music, flute or violin.
I would dress as I did pre-Covid,
elegant, put together.
Lipstick, eye shadow, rouge.
The guest list, long.
The problems, great.
One resides in Paris.
Others have left the state.
Some have completely disappeared.
A few have breathed their last.
Nonetheless, I see it all.
Even hear the chatter.
The noises of soiree.
Voices, laughter, clatter.
I know it cannot come to pass
though I embrace the scene.
Grateful to young friends of yore
even if we can’t convene.

Lynn Benjamin
November 12, 2021

All Poems, Birthdays, Family, Growth, Invitations, Love, Memories, Spouses

Opportunities

 

An invitation to Bob on his 60th birthday to have some tea and reflect with me

Lots of people I know view life as a journey,
A developmental package plan.
A start point.
Stops at designated, predetermined destinations.
Toddlerhood, latency, adolescence and adulthood.
Then an end.
Perhaps, first, with a recapitulation, albeit brief,
of the beginning.
Think Shakespeare’s All the World’s a Stage.
Both metaphoric and punning.
Which, by the way, my head hears recited
not in the deep, melodic voice of Sir Laurence Olivier.
But, in the high pitched 3rd grade rendition
of Zev Benjamin, aptly coached by Roseanne.

Getting back to journeys.
I must admit that, at times, I view my trips
as isomorphic miniatures of the larger lifespan passage.
However, I prefer to embrace each day,
each hour, each minute as an opportunity.
To give a gift to myself or to someone else.
My gifts to self are simple:
thinking, learning, understanding, and caring.
My gifts to others are similarly straightforward:
observing, listening, empathizing.
All, simple formulas that render dialogue complete.

Along the path of my own soulful searching,
I met a kindred mate who thought like I.
Viewed our meeting as an occasion for joy.
The bliss evolved.
An uncontainable bursting into blueberries, beans, and babies.
Seeds of promise, boundless.
Blowing in every direction, like dandelion parachutes.
Past the boundaries of our common garden.
Planting themselves in faraway places.
Over time, the winds shifted.
Inexorably, the prophecy of Khalil Gibran rang true:

Your children are not your children….
You may give them your love but not your thoughts…
…their souls dwell in the house of tomorrow, which you cannot visit, not even in your dreams.

So, we surrendered to the inevitable.
Found each other again.
Educated  by career, travel.
The latest trend in technological temptation.
No new degrees, but experience, wisdom, age to share.

We learned the brain stays as healthy as the heart is fit.
Worked our best to maintain the mortal frame.
But, in truth, our strongest bond is at the level of the soul.
The love of soul mates surpasses the mundane.
Into the realm of spirituality.

Not long ago, our Dan asked me what I meant by spirituality.
I thought I might digress to ponder his query.
An awe of, a connection with the space around me.
People, animals, trees.
Their births, beauty, demise.
A force unseen by others yet inspirational.
My spiritual self is moved by redwoods,  birches.
Mountain chains and hills, oceans and streams.
Condors and finches.
Deserts and beaches.
Lions and kittens.
Large families and small, (conventional or not).
Presidents and peasants.
Computers and paper.
New light and darkness.

My spirit dreams of my forebears.
Russian ancestors toiling, suffering,  sailing.
Through rough seas.
To deliver their gene pool to progeny they’d never know.
On both sides of the Americas.
Grandparents and parents, locked in conjugal embrace.
Whispering earthly possibilities into my lungs.
Including fulfillment of my soul’s affection.
According to the chant of an ancient love song.

I am my beloved’s, and my beloved is mine….
My beloved is gone down into his garden…
Come, my beloved, let us go forth into the field;…
Let us get up early to the vineyards; let us see if the vine flourish, whether the tender grapes appear….There I will give thee my loves.
…At our gates are all manner of pleasant fruits, new and old, which I have laid up for thee, O my beloved.
I am my beloved’s, and his desire is toward me.

Together, my beloved and I have sown in our garden.
Passion and meaning.
Children and peas.
Roses and sunflowers.
We have hoed gardens of others.
Read, walked, talked, learned.
Fantasized, wished, yearned.
Abandoned worries, laughed.
Admired, encouraged each other.

But, our opportunity today is the present.
Wrapped in the warm breath of Autumn’s annual debut.
Let us encounter each other anew.
With gratitude for the past.
Wonder at the mystery of tomorrow.

The days are getting shorter now.
It’s a little chilly outside. Come close, Bob.
Pour the tea. Let’s talk.
What are you thinking?

With love, Lynn
September 27, 2008

Adult Children, Aging, All Poems, Emotions, Family, Growth, Hope, Invitations, Mother Love, Time, Wisdom

Come Dance With Me

Come dance with me, my son.
Let me gaze into your eyes
like I’ve done a hundred, nay a thousand, times before.

Let me hold you and follow your lead in silence.
Let’s not slip into
judgments, assumptions, expectations,
embedded indirect messages.
Jarring  harmony, sending you
two steps back, two steps away from me.

Let me take your hand, my son,  pull you closer.

In truth, I do not search for anything more than who you are.

Feel free to change the melody, the beat, the tempo.
I will not protest.
Come dance with me, my son.

Dance with me while I can still whirl.
Dance with me while I can still see.
Dance with me while I can still hear.

Dance with me without ambivalence or hesitation.
Know that even if I stumble,
my desire to connect with you is pure, without malice.

If words are arrows that sting,
then I will disarm.

I do not covet power.
I do not need to win.
I merely want to dance,
to admire the boy who has come be to a man.

Come dance with me before the lights go dim.
Come dance with me before the music stops.
Come dance. I promise to be honest and true.
Can you?

Lynn Benjamin
November 12, 2017
(written outside of awareness in the middle of the night)

Adulthood, Aging, All Poems, Animals/Insects, Children, For Children, Invitations, Natural Beauty, People Traits, Wisdom

Wake-Up Call

A graceful goldfinch flitted from one Echinacea flower to another.
Then to pink blossoms on a crape myrtle
across the way.
Like the bird, my own thoughts took flight.
Following it along its path.
Striking me with a revelation.
About a special understanding.
Between grandparents and young people.
Both sharing a kind of wisdom.
For the little ones, borne of deep curiosity,
desire to know, keen observation of details.
For the elders, more a consequence of living,
learning, experiencing.
A perfect dovetail.
But those years between can be muddled,
clouded, confused with goals, tasks.
Obscuring simple sensing, being, appreciating.
Strange, the connection between uncluttered children and decluttering seniors.
Too bad we don’t know how to simplify sooner.

What’s that buzz, that hovering above?
A hummingbird darting between hydrangeas and blue sage?
A wake-up call for me!
But not to do.
To celebrate the moment.
To point it out to a child who’d like to see with me.

Lynn Benjamin
August 3, 2021