Poems From “Grief Age Love”
December 2025, Poetry

Poems From “Grief Age Love”

The following poems are included in a new anthology of poems written by over 30 Vashon poets, and edited by Jeanie Okimoto of Endicott and Hugh Books.

Editor’s note: We meant to include the following poem by Lynn Carrigan in our November issue, and feel it is just as rich in December! Enjoy.

Mid-November

In front of a warm cedar house
In leaf-dropping woods by the sea
Head high atop a wizening stalk
One last sunflower transmits
Its beacon-yellow message

Under the dissolving rain of fall
Above a radio tower below
It blinks back a signal of its own
Its broadcast insistent: I remain!

I am here, it calls, I am still here!
I will self-seed my own renewal
for a future I cannot see

Remember me and wish me safe
Passage through this long winter

I will not be as I am now

A longtime lover of literacy, Lynn likes languages, letters, libraries, locals, luggage, and sometimes lying. 

More about Lynn:

“Before launching a career in journalism and social work, I came to poetry at 17.  Thanks to my high school English teachers in Decatur, GA, during that time of raging battles for civil rights, I learned  that the rich, story-telling language of the American South could balance the world’s heartbreaks with a close observation of both inner and outer experiences, an appreciation of small wonders, and the courage to make both sense and music with words.

Over the years my work has appeared in many professional conferences and publications, and my poetry most recently in Jeanie Okimoto’s 2025 poetry anthology Grief Age Love, the Wesleyan University anti-war anthology We Speak for Peace, Vashon Center for the Arts chapbooks Vashon Writes and The Work We Do, and presented over Voice of Vashon radio and the annual nationwide broadcast of 100Thousand Poets for Peace.”

~

the wave

There is a wave

that tempers the world

There is number and season

rhythm for stride

There are those ducks

afloat even in winters

that hold their chill

at any distance.

And here is a mist no eye can dispel

no eye to number the wave of days

or dot the horizon longer and higher

than those floating ducks

where time comes in waves

of no beginning or end.

~ Claudia Hollander-Lucas

Claudia Hollander-Lucas is a visual artist, writer, book-maker, and long-time Islander whose artwork can be found near and far in public and private collections. Visit her website and press called We Live In The Woods for details: claudiahollander-lucas.com

December 10, 2025

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