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185 · Mar 2019
Antidote for Evil
Victor D López Mar 2019
We must **** evil,
Not with the sword but the pen,
Truth it can't abide.
184 · Feb 2019
Old Poems
Victor D López Feb 2019
I've read some poems I'd written long ago,
Tenderly kept by one I love most dear,
And through them I've come to once again know,
Old feelings which inspired both warmth and fear.

For a moment I saw my love revived,
And was engulfed by growing tenderness,
There was much power in words which survived,
To pay mute homage to past happiness.

Yellowing, crinkled paper brought to me,
Glimpses of young, unbridled, simple love,
The awkward, fading words helped me to see,
That I have lived the dream I'm dreaming of.

How can I feel this painful emptiness,
When by enduring love I am so blessed?
From Of pain and Ecstasy: Collected Poems
183 · Aug 2019
The World Is My Oyster
Victor D López Aug 2019
The world is my oyster,
Though it is three days dead,
Malodorous coffin,
Lined in mother of pearl,
Concealing no treasure,
Not a perfect large pearl,
Just my flesh-covered bones,
And the dreams I once dreamed,
That died while yet I lived,
And hoped they might be born.
Victor D López Jun 2022
I've published twenty books to date,
I love to write, that's just my fate,
My textbooks tens of thousands used,
But my poetry needs a boost.

More write than read poems it seems,
And I won't pay marketing schemes,
Nor will I pay for book reviews,
In hopes of better book sale news.

The mortgage my non-fiction paid,
My publishers more profits made,
My first house fully paid by them,
My indie fiction's no such gem.

Judge not my poems by these weak lines,
They're as annoying as French mimes,
My books much better verse contain,
(So does graffiti on a train.)

For those still reading these my lines,
Download my first book free online,
You'll find it at the link below,
Until June 10, not one day more.

All eBook versions free through June 10, but only at one of the retailers where the book is sold: https://www.smashwords.com/books/view/181370
182 · Jul 2024
Obey the Golden Rule
Victor D López Jul 2024
Obey the golden rule, my friend,
But not by rust gilded with words,
Like politicians feed the herds,
That have no value in the end.

There is no parsing of the rule,
Not for those who are honor bound,
Let kindness, helpfulness abound,
Even when others call you fool.

When others scorn you, show them love,
I know it's not easy to do,
But your kindness will shine through,
To them and to your God above.

If you sow bitterness you'll reap,
A bitter harvest in due time,
To reap a harvest that's sublime,
Sow only kindness, take that leap.

Obey the golden rule your whole life through,
It may not save the world, but may save you.
181 · Feb 2019
The Power of Love and Hate
Victor D López Feb 2019
God's grace in this world,
Can overcome and vanquish,
Cruel hearts filled with hate.
Read this haiku and then read it in reverse from the bottom up for an arguably equally true reverse statement.
181 · Dec 2019
Malas Ideas
Victor D López Dec 2019
Las malas ideas no mueren,
Prosperan como hongos en la oscuridad,
Desarráigalas con luz.
Victor D López Apr 2022
When seeking knowledge occupies your mind,
Start close to home, and wisdom you may find.

Cast hubris out, and then truth will appear,
You may not know it, but it's always near.

Look not to the horizon to find truth,
Lest there you find only your wasted youth.
These three couplets are teasers for my short story, Eternal Quest which you can download free until 4/25/22, but only at https://www.smashwords.com/books/view/181305
179 · Apr 2019
Life
Victor D López Apr 2019
A carnival ride,
Of limitless potential,
With little control.
Victor D López May 2022
Redemption

What if a long-dead beauty,
Let you see your failings in life,
Would you fight for redemption?


Modern Art and the Critics

How do we know that what hangs,
On modern art galleries now,
Merits our calling it art?

The above hakus are teasers for two short stories by the
same names that you can download free until May 31
but only at https://www.smashwords.com/books/view/1138974
178 · Apr 2019
Most Precious Treasure
Victor D López Apr 2019
Government can take your land,
Confiscate your property,
Tax your earnings into dust,
Deprive you of your freedom,
Extinguish your very life.

But the knowledge you acquire,
And the honor that you earn,
Are a treasure they can't steal,
Tax, redistribute, destroy.

Governments come and they go,
Just and unjust ones alike,
And fade from memory in time.

Entropy rules in this world,
And the brightest lights fade out.

Knowledge and honor perdure.
178 · Dec 2019
El Velo Levantado
Victor D López Dec 2019
Tus ojos vidriados me miraban,
Sin reconocimiento,
Pero ahora lo ves todo.
Victor D López Feb 2019
With tender care the gardener plants her seeds,
Pregnant with hidden beauty yet to be,
Tends it with loving toil the season through,
Reaps the reward in May of glorious blooms.

Far more than flowers grow for all to see,
Civic pride, hope, inspiration bloom there too.
First published earlier today at AllPoetry.com in response to a challenge to respond in 50 words or less to the Spanish proverb "More grows in the garden than the gardner knows he has planted" I chose a positive spin on the old saying.
178 · Dec 2019
Hazle Frente al Mal
Victor D López Dec 2019
El mal triunfará,
Cuando neciamente nos negamos,
A llamarlo por su nombre.
177 · Feb 2022
Mergs
Victor D López Feb 2022
We choose to keep the homeless out of sight,
As though they'd vanish if we do not look,
It's easy to ignore their sorry plight,
Treat them as lesser humans God forsook.

We easily dismiss the luckless few,
Though there but for God's grace may go we all,
Yet hubris blinds us to what we once knew,
Before our childhood's end, before our fall.

How different to us the world would seem,
If we knew billions worshipped each of us,
Unheard, unseen, their fates not ours to glean,
The least of us, in fact, a world en masse.

If kings and paupers both are just the same,
Denying each dignity is insane.
This sonnet is intended as a teaser for one of my short stories, "Mergs (or Why Godot Can't Come)".
177 · Dec 2019
Por Qué Escribo
Victor D López Dec 2019
No escribo por dinero,
Y aún menos por fama,
Escribo porque tengo que hacerlo,
Es simplemente quien soy.

Soy competente en muchos oficios,
Con maestría en algunos,
Pero no me definen,
Es simplemente lo que hago.

Lo que escribo no perdurará,
Gran parte no se leerá,
Poco de lo que publico,
sobrevivirá mucho tiempo cuando muera.

Yo escribiría si nadie me leyera,
En tinta, en la arena o en sangre,
Mientras la razón perdure,
Sé que no voy a parar.

Es así para todos quienes somos,
Escritores en nuestro núcleo,
Escribir es nuestra esencia,
Es lo que somos, nada más.
Translated from my poem, "Why I Write"
Victor D López Jun 2022
Two decades passed since my first book of poems,
It was past time to publish volume two,
The sands of time weigh heavy on my bones,
And my road narrows with yet much to do.

Too many friends have now passed through the veil,
As have my parents and their siblings all,
My circle narrows, empty now my vale,
In sleepless nights I can but hear their call.

So many dreams deferred that now have died,
My negligence bereft them of their life,
So many doors left closed I should have tried,
No hope remains for me or for my wife.

Even my music echoes distant, dull,
But poetry can for a time pain lull.

____
If you would like to download a free copy of the eBook version of my second book of poems, Echoes of Dawn at Dusk, you can do so only at https://www.smashwords.com/books/view/1035449 until June 20, 2022.
176 · Apr 2019
Mistakes
Victor D López Apr 2019
Mistakes are the tools,
The Creator provides us,
To sculpt our own souls.
175 · Dec 2018
Procrastination
Victor D López Dec 2018
Intentionally,
Avoiding productive work,
No guilt, no way, nope.
174 · Apr 2019
Meaning
Victor D López Apr 2019
I quest for meaning,
Knowing it's not mine to find,
Yet the quest goes on.
174 · Dec 2019
El Río de la Vida
Victor D López Dec 2019
Las aguas plácidas fluyen,
Perezosamente este día de verano,
Pero oigo las cataratas.
173 · Dec 2019
La Vida
Victor D López Dec 2019
Las arenas del tiempo fluyen,
Cayendo hacia el olvido,
dejando algo atrás.
translated from my haiku "Life"
Victor D López Jan 2022
Drunkard, homeless, god,
With billions of supplicants,
Praying for his help.
You can hear me read a preview of the short story with the same name and theme at https://open.spotify.com/episode/0i6GfdaVIaE00rZR6rMWHK?si=hLLzjfmGQwKcaJppZtzHRA
173 · Dec 2021
Justice
Victor D López Dec 2021
When conformity,
Is imposed by government,
Tyranny has won.

If freedom of thought,
Comes at the cost of one's life,
It is worth the price.
You can hear me read my entire short story of the same title and related theme at https://open.spotify.com/episode/7oEx2bqyLeKqlPCwm25XMe?si=giVmk2xfTZuUetweuhx7tw
173 · Jul 2024
Small Acts of Kindness
Victor D López Jul 2024
Some say dark matter,
Holds galaxies together,
In the endless void.

In smallest doses,
Kindness keeps humanity,
From drifting apart.

Its powerful force,
Our shield in darkest of times,
Against entropy.

Out of many one,
Held together by selfless,
Small acts of kindness.
173 · Jan 2020
Agree to Disagree
Victor D López Jan 2020
agree
gracefully
to disagree

to disagree
on how we view the world
is not a sin

a sin
is forcing
our views on others
171 · Jan 2022
Blood Paella
Victor D López Jan 2022
Frozen meat, knife slips,
Cuts ring finger to the bone,
Bleeding will not stop,

Late night ER trip,
Ahead of oncoming storm,
stitches or glue seal?

Tendon nearly missed,
Wound cleaned, sealed, and blood flow stopped,
Wound dressed and sent home.

Sleet and snow falling,
Got home, went back to cooking,
Unfinished main dish.

Washed my blood from plate,
$250 rice dish,
Completed at last.

Greedily consumed,
ER Fees won't ruin,
This cook's appetite.


Based on this week's latest ordeal. My carelessness had its price with a $250 ER visit despite my supposed "Cadillac" health plan. But there's no use crying over spilt blood--and I did pick up where I left off and enjoyed a tasty albeit now much more expensive dish. That's what I get for separating frozen chorizo with my favorite very sharp knife carelessly--even while knowing if I slipped I could get a nasty cut. As I've written elsewhere in one of my short stories, my wife is justified in calling me the smartest idiot she knows. *SIGH
Victor D López Oct 2024
You were brought to the U.S. at eight years of age,
By hard-working parents seeking a better life,
Especially for you and your sister, Carmen,
Than was available in your native Galicia of the time.

Both of your parents, Carmen and Manuel, had strong work ethics,
That allowed them to pull themselves up by their bootstraps,
Through hard, honest work in very hard times,
Guided by a strong moral compass they passed on to their two children.

You and your parents lived for many years in Downtown Manhattan,
In a tenement on Cherry Street where Spaniards gathered amongst their own.
You began working at a very young age unloading and delivering newspapers,
And in other jobs that included working as a soda **** in a drugstore.

The Lower East Side was your cradle and your domain in which,
You made life-long friends, including your best friend, Larry Morell.
You learned responsibility there, and a yearning to succeed,
Never letting humble beginnings serve as an excuse for failure.

You were frugal then of necessity, but also generous to a fault with those less fortunate,
And even when working in an office job, you’d walk miles every day,
To save the five-cent subway fare that would leave you a quarter,
For your favorite Saturday activity—the movies.

Every Saturday you would spend that hard-saved quarter only after walking
To every local theater to determine which offered the best movies,
Before spending your quarter in a temporary palace offering two films and a newsreel,
Your silver-screen gateway to excitement, travel, and your window to the world.

You were a gifted athlete in track and field, successfully competing in meets
And earning numerous medals. Your son, Bob, surpassed you in his athletic
Prowess and earned so many medals and trophies even before and during high school
That his mom quipped he must be buying them at a local store.

Good genes and hard work propelled Bob to excellence in track and field, soccer, rugby,
Basketball and only he knows what else since childhood through his years at the
Air Force Academy and beyond. He retired as a Lt. Colonel, special forces para-jumper, and Held multiple levels of command with numerous combat tours he never talks about.

Your daughter, Alice, also inherited your athleticism and was accomplished in fencing and Gymnastics in high school. And she is also an excellent writer with outstanding Organization skills—it took three people ((one full-time, and two part-time) to replace her in The Publications Department when we married, and she left her job for our move upstate.  
You Volunteered to serve in the Korean War and attained the rank of Corporal.
The touch-typing skill you learned in a Manhattan business school served you well,
And you became your company’s clerk, serving by the border with North Korea,
In a more serious version of the beloved character of Radar O’Reilly of MASH fame.

You almost never spoke about your service. But on two occasions during our long talks,
You mentioned that only once during your tour of duty did you actually hold a gun,
When ordered to escort a prisoner further South on a long Jeep ride while another
Trooper drove. Though always in danger very close to the hostilities, you never saw combat.

Your second war story told through tears more recently, but before the dementia
That plagued you for the past years of your life robbed you of your memory,
Included your efforts to quietly help North Korean families fleeing South who
Sometimes wandered through or near your camp in the middle of the night.

When you returned home from your tour of duty, you took advantage of the GI Bill,
To earn a college degree at night as you worked in an office clerical position,
And you continued your graduate studies when you became a high school teacher,
Earning at least one master’s degree over an extended period of time.

After your service in Korea, you traveled to Spain, fell in love, and married
Your wife in your native Galicia, a beautiful, loquacious woman, Marisa, who helped
To soften your serious, no-nonsense persona and draw out your social nature
While giving you a daughter and then a son and supporting your long years of study.

She joined you in Lower Manhattan when her visa was granted. And a two years later,
After your daughter Alice was born, you both bought your forever home in Queens.
It was a very old, two-family home that needed a lot of work which you undertook,
While working and still studying for your first college degree.

Your daughter was 25 months old and your son three months when you moved,
Leaving your young wife to raise two young, active, energetic children as you worked and Studied, with very little support, working tirelessly with limited funds and patiently
Waiting for you to complete your studies which took more than a decade.

You got your teaching certificate and began teaching at Bryant High School
Within a short walking distance from your home. You taught Spanish to native speakers,
And continued your studies for your master’s degree also at night, traveling for years to
NYU, St. John’s University, and Hunter College for courses.

After five years of night classes, your wife gently began to ask you “When will you finish?”
You told her seven more years. Even after the 12-year ordeal, you remained busy with
Grading, lesson plans, and the unseen work all teachers knows only too well.
But your wife and children finally got to see you at the dinner table nightly.


You loved the freedom of summers off, and traveled most summers to Spain,
With your wife and children for two months from 1964 on,
Living there with your parents and finally having your wife able to spend time
With her own parents, a short ride by car or bus from your parents’ home.

During those summers, you came across widows struggling whose husbands
Had worked for many years in the U.S. but had died in relative poverty.
You took on the role of advocate for them, getting for many Social Security
Survivor’s pensions for husbands who died without filing for benefits themselves.

You took this on without being asked as a charitable act that during hard times
Brought desperately needed relief to some living in abject poverty.
It was one of many acts of charity, of kindness, that you extended to others
Throughout your life—known only if beneficiaries gratefully acknowledged it.

You loved music, especially classical music, opera, and crooners like Frank Sinatra
And Perry Como. You often retired to your study to listen to music as you worked.
Just days before passing away when you no longer communicated or recognized
Loved ones, your son noted how you tapped your fingers on your table listening to opera.

The last year of work before you took early retirement, you gave up your
Teaching and advisement duties at Bryant High School and accepted a
Promotion to the Board of Education to work on creating new standards for
Bilingual education and help in their implementation.

Rather than a short walk to work, you now had to drive during rush hour to and from
The Board of Education near the Brooklyn Heights area. It was not a pleasant commute.
Moreover, you were tasked once the plan was in place with traveling to high schools
All around NYC to help implement and assess the program.

Despite your commitment to a program you believed would help thousands of students,
You were miserable with your administrative duties and constant driving to schools
In Manhattan and in the outer boroughs. After about a year, you’d had enough,
And you took early retirement to travel with your wife and enjoy life.

Before and after retirement, you were an avid writer. You leave behind hundreds of poems,
An unpublished historical novel, and goodness knows what else locked away in your
Computer’s hard drive. You loved history, especially the history of Spain generally and Especially Galicia, as well as U.S. and world history. You were also a talented painter.

You enjoyed speculative documentaries on the possible interaction between alien visitors And early humans along the lines of Erich von Däniken’s Chariots of the Gods.
You knew my interest in science fiction and loved to pose “what if” scenarios on
The possibility of our civilization having cyclically destroyed itself and risen from the ashes.


You and I shared a love for writing fiction, poetry, and non-fiction and had countless Discussions on these topics, and music, teaching, art,  politics, and so much more.
When I bought my first computer, you were fascinated and asked me to order you one.
I did. In the days before the Internet or books on the subject, you were willing to learn.

I taught you the basics of the DOS operating system, and WordStar, and then WordPerfect.
You were a good student, though the new technology was a challenge for you.
Nevertheless, as a touch-typist you were happy to abandon your manual typewriter
For the wonderful flexibility of a full-featured word processor.

We spent many, many hours on your new computer—and the many others you later
Asked me to order, but you never looked back and in your late 50s became a convert.
When my dad retired, I did the same for him in his 60s, and he took to it like the proverbial
Duck to water, though my dad was far more interested in and experienced with technology.

You were much more than my father-in-law, family, and a trusted colleague and friend.
I loved you dearly, as I did my mother-in-law, and was blessed to have a special Relationship with you both and to have spent so many years in your company.
I will miss you forever, as will the thousands of people whose lives you’ve touched.

The world is diminished by your passing.
But in the end, it has been enriched by your journey in it.
Your bright candle burned weakly in recent years and has finally sputtered out.
It’s smoke now swirls slowly towards the heavens where loved ones await you.

Rest in peace.
170 · Mar 2023
Our Government
Victor D López Mar 2023
A three-ring circus,
No animals/acrobats,
Just pathetic clowns.
170 · Jul 2019
Love Conquers All
Victor D López Jul 2019
Does true love exist,
Or do we simply dream it,
To fill empty lives?

And if it is real,
Do we see it with our hearts,
Or just with our eyes?

Can we ever tell,
Self-delusion from true love,
And does it matter?

Should we not embrace,
A chance for shared joy when found,
If it does no harm?

Believe in true love,
Hope and dream and strive for it,
If it's not yet yours.

It gives life meaning,
Makes all our pain bearable,
Keeps away despair.
These linked haikus are also a takeoff on my short story "Amor Vincit Omnia" that deals with humor with a very serious topic--the need to be understood and loved with our faults and the mind's rebellion against real or perceived incompatibility with our mates that can lead to some unusual consequences. Can the quest for true love lead to a path of self delusion and madness, or can the universe however strangely or unlikely bring two well-matched, lonely souls together? If we find true love, be it in madness, self delusion or reality, does it fundamentally matter at all?
170 · Dec 2022
A Holiday Message
Victor D López Dec 2022
The holidays approach with quiet grace,
Floating above the merchandising din,
Their spirit fills our hearts, their proper place,
Displacing hate, greed, envy, and all sin.

Whether you worship Jesus, as I do,
Allah, YHWH, or other Deity,
That teaches justice, honor, all things true,
We are family joined in piety.

Those who would divide us worship no god,
They worship power, seek not grace or truth,
They sow the seeds of hate on fertile sod,
The minds of fools and our innocent youth.

I bid you peace in all your holidays,
May God’s light burn true paths through evil’s haze.
Victor D López Jul 2023
Pandemic home bound,
Completed my first novel,
Begun decades past

What was dead revived,
Sleepless nights spent writing it,
In two months complete.

Wanted an agent,
But pandemic made it hard,
To get a response.

So went indie route,
Published hard cover and soft,
But too few have read.

So I decided,
To make it available,
Free of charge online.

Never meant to make,
Profits from this work of mine,
Just wanted it read.

It is a story,
That others should know,
About higher ed.

Drama, love, humor,
Triumph, life altering loss,
Sacrifice for naught?

You can buy it, yes,
But now also read it free,
At the link below.

Will post it complete,
With Echoes of the Mind's Eye,
Latest short stories.

Click the link below,
To access both books free,
English / Spanish--both.

https://www.royalroad.com/profile/368939/fictions
169 · Feb 2022
Earth Mother
Victor D López Feb 2022
A beautiful woman is awakened,
By an off-world visitor with a plea,
With enticing compensation promised,
If she will render a simple service.

Compensation would be two priceless gifts,
No humans possess and few would pass up.
Say yes, and the world could be her oyster,
Her high ambitions within easy reach.

Should she accept? And if she does, will she,
Attain all that she craves, or tragedy?
This is a teaser for my SF short story by the same name
169 · Mar 2019
Winning
Victor D López Mar 2019
By losing we win,
When pride is the only prize,
In our loved one's eyes
168 · Dec 2019
El río de la vida 2
Victor D López Dec 2019
El río de la vida,
Fluye por un rato,
Y muy pronto seca.

Míralo desde la orilla,
Desde la seguridad de la tierra firme,
Y nunca te ahogarás.

Pero si te sumerges en el,
Navegas los rápidos fluviales, arriesgas las cataratas,
Flotas en sus curvas plácidas.

Conoceras la alegría,
De paisajes en constante cambio,
Más que vale la pena el riesgo.

Te rasparan las rocas,
No encontraras sombra contra el sol,
Y poco tiempo para el descanso.

Cuando las aguas se secan,
Y llegas al final de tu viaje,
Realmente habrás vivido.
168 · Dec 2021
Deer Food
Victor D López Dec 2021
Peaches from my tree,
Eaten by deer every fall,
Before I pick them.
168 · Jan 2020
Coding Will Set You Free
Victor D López Jan 2020
Coding will set you free,
Repair, rework, renew, reinvent ruinous reality,
Into a multiverse where reason reigns and creativity flourishes.

Excise the tired, mundane, mind-numbing predictability of the real,
Transform it into a rebooted reality that erases every flaw,
Expiates original sin and finally frees humanity from its anchor to clay.

Soar on the winds of possibility to heights undreamed of,
With wings not of feathers and wax impervious to the sun,
Then cut the cord of existence and live forever in a perfect world.
167 · Apr 2020
If You Thirst
Victor D López Apr 2020
if
you thirst
for justice
quench your thirst friend
by doing what's right

if
you thirst
for glory
quench your thirst friend
accomplish great deeds

if
you thirst
for money
quench your thirst friend
through honest hard work

if
you thirst
for freedom
quench your thirst friend
setting others free

if
you thirst
for God's grace
quench your thirst friend
helping all you can

if
you thirst
for power
drink as you might
you will die of thirst
167 · Nov 2019
Perky Pachyderm
Victor D López Nov 2019
Little, cuddly, smart,
And in the fullness of time,
He will move mountains.
166 · Jan 2022
Career Advice
Victor D López Jan 2022
Work is a true joy,
When it involves your passion,
Choose careers wisely.

Of your time on earth,
Much will be spent preparing,
For work and working.

Make your life's work count,
By choosing meaningful work,
Leave something behind.
165 · Apr 2019
Positive Change
Victor D López Apr 2019
You won't change the world,
Regardless how hard you try,
Work to change yourself.
163 · Jan 2023
I Am Unworhy, Lord
Victor D López Jan 2023
I am unworthy, Lord,
And yet You love me.

I am a sinner,
And yet may be redeemed.

I try to walk in the light,
And yet at times walk in darkness.

I fight despair,
And yet it lives and thrives.

I know that I know nothing,
And yet I am not wise.

I know the best in me lies buried,
And yet it may still rise.

I know hope is a dream,
And yet it will not die.
161 · Apr 2019
Cheaters Cheat
Victor D López Apr 2019
If you have betrayed,
The one you pledged your life to,
Why would I trust you?
161 · Apr 2019
On Mindless Tenacity
Victor D López Apr 2019
The thoughtless pursuit,
Of any task throughout life,
Will never end well.
161 · Dec 2021
Most Prized Christmas Gift
Victor D López Dec 2021
Most prized Christmas gift,
Humble table, a meal shared,
With loved ones still here.
160 · Dec 2019
As We Sow Thus Do We Reap
Victor D López Dec 2019
I’ve sown words on fertile ground,
Watered them with sweat and tears,
Fertilized them with dead dreams,
And they grew, flowered and thrived.

A rich harvest have I now,
Bushels full of dead, pressed leaves,
Bound in colorful covers,
That others may thumb at will.

They bring rewards and some joy,
Will survive me, if not long,
And help others still to learn,
And I hope help improve lives.

Wish though I’d sown fewer words,
Reaped fewer bushels of leaves,
Chosen to sow other seeds,
That would have bloomed into souls.

In a heartbeat I’d exchange,
Bushels of pretty dead leaves,
For a daughter of my own,
To have loved through all my years.

Choices cannot be undone,
Roads not taken beckon still,
At least I know when I’m gone,
Dead leaves will never cry tears.
160 · Jun 2019
On Raising Ravens
Victor D López Jun 2019
Fledgling,
Broken wing,
Carefully nursed,
Shielded,
Nourished,
Loved,
Healthy again,
Vantablack wings,
Powerfully beating,
Propelled skyward,
Fueled by,
Benefactor's eyes.
160 · Apr 2019
Mi Gran Ambición
Victor D López Apr 2019
Mi gran ambición,
Que todos mis alumnos,
Brillen mas que yo.
Victor D López Dec 2021
Can our dreams **** us?
One man finds they can and leaves
A warning and proof.
This is another teaser for my short story of the dsame name. You can hear a preview reading at https://open.spotify.com/episode/5qtz2Dr5ESxdMYa9DsgLNC?si=jpAF_48kS8-KjCUKGePu-g
159 · Apr 2020
Apollo 13
Victor D López Apr 2020
In hour fifty-five,
"Houston, we have a problem",
200K miles.

No rescue to come,
So easy to accept fate,
Say their last good-byes.

But not for these men,
Surrender not an option,
Theirs is the right stuff.

Just work the problem,
MacGyver a solution,
Use what is at hand.

Squares fit into rounds?
No problems for NASA's best,
Duct tape and a sock.

Make spare scrubbers work,
Remove CO2 before,
Death comes to all three.

The workaround works,
Freezing heroes fly back home,
Glorious splash down.

Ingenuity,
And the hearts of true heroes,
Disasters avert.
Written for a poetry challenge on AllPoetry.com
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