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261 · Nov 2018
The Cure
Kurt Philip Behm Nov 2018
Truth,
  the social mammogram

Forgiveness
  —chemotherapy of the Gods

(Villanova Pennsylvania: March, 2015)
261 · Dec 2016
Rustler Of Graves
Kurt Philip Behm Dec 2016
Translation,
  the executioner of emotion,
  —and rustler of graves

(Chicago Illinois: Water Tower with Studs Terkel—July, 1977)
261 · Mar 2021
Adieu
Kurt Philip Behm Mar 2021
The most important things don’t need a reason
—just because

The falling leaves beyond their season
—just because

The sun trades the night to the rising moon
—just because

The lateness that brings one last final adieu
—just because

(Villanova Pennsylvania: October, 2016)
261 · Jun 2024
Cause & Effect
Kurt Philip Behm Jun 2024
Decision triggers fate
like a fuse ignites a bomb

Priming every choice we make
— until all karma’s gone

(Dreamsleep: June, 2024)
260 · Aug 2018
Cross Hairs
Kurt Philip Behm Aug 2018
High caliber verse
  the cartridge hand loaded

A new target centered
  all focus then squared

Its barrel’s been filled
  with red molten fury

Whose trigger awaits
  —a desperate will

(Villanova Pennsylvania: June, 2016)
260 · May 29
Lambs To Slaughter
Religion ...
*****
of the poor
And roadmap
of the forever
— lost

(1st Book Of Prayers: May, 2025)
260 · Mar 2024
Darkness Waits
Kurt Philip Behm Mar 2024
She whispers in the night
to waiting dreamers

She whispers in the night
where tears have shed

She whispers in the night
to hearts abandoned

She whispers in the night
— and wakes the dead


(Ryszard & I: March, 2024)
260 · May 2024
A Woman Scorned
Kurt Philip Behm May 2024
The Muse continues to punish me
whenever I write prose

Her slaps severe with pain heartfelt
no fury 'hell hath known'

She sentences me to endless nights
and days when words won't come

Until I succumb to writing verse
and she — my breath becomes


(Fairmount Park: October, 2016)
260 · Feb 2017
Uncertainties Lair
Kurt Philip Behm Feb 2017
Sneaking into the enemy camp,
  the guards now fast asleep

Crawling past the sorrow and pain,
  old promises to keep

Now inside the enemy camp,
  for one last time, alone

Burrowing into uncertainties lair,
—to despoil the unknown

(Villanova Pennsylvania: February, 2017)
260 · Mar 2017
Moment's Left Unfelt
Kurt Philip Behm Mar 2017
I often sit here waiting,
  on days when words won’t come

To chase the thoughts now fleeting,
  their messages on the run

These days I sit impatient,
   as I wonder to myself

Are time and memory draining,
—precious moments left unfelt

(Villanova Pennsylvania: March, 2017)
259 · Nov 2023
New Reasons
Kurt Philip Behm Nov 2023
The older the day
  the sweeter the memory

The sweeter the memory
  new reasons to find

New reasons to find
  tomorrow unmentioned

Tomorrow unmentioned
—the present Divine

(1st Book Of Prayers: July, 2018)
259 · May 2017
Into The Light
Kurt Philip Behm May 2017
That road that I searched for,
  led me into the words

Their geography inward,
  their ownership heard

All possessions relinquished,
  no teeth left to bite

The journey soft spoken,
  —walking into the light

(Villanova Pennsylvania: May, 2017)
259 · Feb 2021
Truth Inflected
Kurt Philip Behm Feb 2021
The question you didn’t have to ask...
the only answer you need

(Dreamsleep: February, 2021)
259 · Apr 2017
Truth Or Lie
Kurt Philip Behm Apr 2017
Must God stay beyond our
  understanding

His prophecy to conscript
  and confuse

Are the Trinity and  
  Resurrection

Both miracles or only
  a ruse

Do we build temples to
  our edification

Storing Icons that judge
  and decry

Is the Bible fictitious
  or sacred

Is Redemption the truth
  or a lie

(Villanova Pennsylvania: April, 2017)
259 · Apr 17
Forever Lost
You remind me
of a person
I’ve never
met

Of an
idea
that I’ve
never had

Of a
feeling
never mine
to feel

In a
moment
forever
— lost to time

(Dreamsleep: April, 2025)
259 · Nov 2016
Memories
Kurt Philip Behm Nov 2016
Memories,
  diecast in their emotion,
  —catalysts of the soul

(High Point North Carolina: October, 1977)
258 · Mar 2021
Pit Vipers
Kurt Philip Behm Mar 2021
To not appease the critics,
success within our grasp

The charlatans of written words,
venom of the asp

They bury deep inside their dens,
ordained iconoclasts

Passing judgment, casting blame
—on what they fear might last

(To T.R.’s ‘Man In The Arena’ March, 2021)
258 · Apr 2017
Not A Child In Sight
Kurt Philip Behm Apr 2017
A stitch past nine on borrowed time,
  the memories come rushing back

The Wolf is feasting in Grandma’s bed,
  Red Riding Hood a snack

A Cow gets ready to jump again,
  when the moon drops from the sky

Humpty Dumpty a mess on the floor,
—the last horseman says goodbye

The candle burns for Jack’s last jump,
   a quickening funeral pyre

The stepmother screams, Cinderella hides,
  her daughter’s dress on fire

Little Jack Horner abandons his corner,
  curds harden and whey runs aground

As Mother Goose watches the Grimm Brothers die,
  —not a child in sight to be found

(Villanova Pennsylvania: April, 2017)
258 · Jan 2017
Time Deposed
Kurt Philip Behm Jan 2017
Writing verse,
  I dally forth

The hour more stole,
  than loaned

The prose to suffer,
  and stand in line

With time once more,
—deposed

(Villanova Pennsylvania: January, 2017)
258 · Feb 2019
The Mask
Kurt Philip Behm Feb 2019
Time is the mask that all memories wear,
  as feelings age within

Time is the bridge where eternity walks,
  each footstep to begin

Time is a voice spoken only inside
  where denial cannot hear

Time is the measure of what’s yet to come
   —in moments far and near

(Santa Fe New Mexico: February, 2019)
258 · Sep 2022
Broken Wings
Kurt Philip Behm Sep 2022
Not alive enough to die…
lost between a heartbeat
and the bitter end
His spirit wept for
tomorrow
and for yesterday
Mourning all the
buried visions
—of what might have been

(The New Room: September, 2022)
257 · Jan 2022
Blood Stains
Kurt Philip Behm Jan 2022
Compelled to fight *****,
in attempts to stay clean
The shadows conscripted,
clandestine and mean
Surprise as an ally,
you stalk and you spy
To vanquish the monster
—declawed and defied

(Villanova Chapel: December, 2021)
256 · Feb 2017
Another's Contraband
Kurt Philip Behm Feb 2017
Do you play inside the Corn Flakes,
  or are corn stalks more you game

Is that Hersey Bar the answer,
  or the cocoa or *******

Do you clerk for someone’s feelings,
  inspiration all be ******,

Your legacy an afterthought,
—of another’s contraband

(Grantham New Hampshire: February, 2017)
256 · Jun 2021
Idealogue
Kurt Philip Behm Jun 2021
Strength is whittled
as thought pervades

Indecision
—the dullest blade

(The New Room: June, 2021)
256 · Feb 2021
Lip Service
Kurt Philip Behm Feb 2021
Lip Service

We speak of truth, our souls delight,
but actions prove us wrong

If words alone could make it so
—each day would end in song

(University Of Pennsylvania: May, 2021)
256 · Jun 2022
Perchance..."
Kurt Philip Behm Jun 2022
Sleep
—the required reading of all dreamers

(Villanova Pennsylvania: February, 2018)
256 · Aug 2016
Lady Liberty Mourns
Kurt Philip Behm Aug 2016
America has been hi-jacked
By the mainstream media
Reality distorted
  —and the truth scorned

Soundbites of political daggers
Impale a Constitution left wounded
Patriots held hostage
  —as Lady Liberty mourns

(Villanova Pennsylvania: November, 2015)
256 · Aug 2022
The Morning After
Kurt Philip Behm Aug 2022
She’s familiar…
ain’t that the blues

(The Main Point: March, 1972)
256 · Dec 2016
Last Shot Unheard
Kurt Philip Behm Dec 2016
Is a Poem one,
  or a thousand words

The bee sting fatal,
—last shot unheard

(Villanova Pennsylvania: December, 2016)
256 · Jan 2017
The Lost Pen
Kurt Philip Behm Jan 2017
Consumed by my writing,
  devoured in the verse

A sacrificial empty draft,
  waiting for the hearse

Buried just below the line,
  a dead unwritten verb

A victim of tomorrow,
—whose pen has lost its nerve

(Villanova Pennsylvania: January, 2017)
255 · Mar 2019
$$$$$
Kurt Philip Behm Mar 2019
Money…
  an ungrateful heir

Disowning all memory
  —with your ashes still warm

(Villanova Pennsylvania: May, 2016)
255 · Sep 2016
Wishes Still To Pray
Kurt Philip Behm Sep 2016
Are they waiting for me patient,
  as I’m caught up in the game

Are they counting down the moments,
  till I breathe my last refrain

Do they wonder why I dawdle,
  with an opening so wide

Do excuses stoop to waddle,
  as my tardiness contrives

Is that light beyond my tunnel,
  to burn forever long

Is the torch that lights my funeral,
  one to mark and count upon

What now keeps me in this moment,
  as new paths have cleared away

Is it something that I haven’t said,
—or wishes still to pray

(Villanova Pennsylvania: September, 2016)
255 · Jan 2017
To Forever Portend
Kurt Philip Behm Jan 2017
Trapped in the meter,
  a prisoner of rhyme

My spirit indicted,
  destroyer of time

A minstrels disciple,
  epistle in hand

The sound and the rhythm,
  my souls contraband

New couplets my jailer,
  their sentences terse

The key to their freedom,
  locked deep in the verse

And serving in silence,
  chalk marks on the wall

I listen intently,
  for one voice to call

Awaiting its pardon,
  this conviction will end

My words liberated,
—to forever portend

(Villanova Pennsylvania: January, 2017)
254 · Apr 26
'All You Can Eat'
Poetic trattoria  
a feast for the eyes
Visionary smorgasbord
of what — and then why

(Dreamsleep: April, 2025)
254 · Jul 2017
The Raven Has Fled
Kurt Philip Behm Jul 2017
The ribbon is cut
The die is cast
The cement is dry
Yet nothing lasts
The brazen rewarded
The hero a fool
All reason outdated
New fury the tool

A journey presented
Your ship to go far
With doldrums eclipsed
By the light of new stars
The lands will seem foreign
The people most strange
But they’ll smile as you pass
And call you by name
You run and you run
And you run from it all
With no map to guide you
The albatross calls
And then sweet intention
Returns from respite
Rephrasing the unmentioned
Where maybe you might
In fear of the tonic
All healing disdained
Right, left-side disjointed
The cork from the drain
The covers pull back
Your bones are now bare
The tiller is slack
And there’s nobody there
So you take to the helm
Hands firmly in place
And you care not a whit
If it’s all empty space
As a raven is perched
On the yardarm so high
A land bird that lurches
Cawing all truth a lie
And you wonder then maybe
Have you wandered too far
As you ladle the future
From a long empty jar
The wind starts to move
A gift from the moon
What’s whole has been halved
And the sun almost noon
The rigging is creaking
The mast ever tall
The wind has died down
With no new ports of call
The feeling still burns
In the fire within
To find that one thing
That unfound—to you sings
The ocean is flat
The seas become calm
The seasons repeat
From reflection embalmed
The night sky is clearest
The darkest the days
The winds have escaped you
Adrift you now stay
But then just a wisp
Of a breeze on your cheek
Portends of a magic
And the vision you seek
It strengthens and gushes
Throughout all the night
As the red sky last evening
Had hinted it might
As the headsails go up
The big linen comes down
And you climb up the mast
Stepping over a frown
The creak of the lapstrake
Splashes over the bow
The present’s in sight
Incarnate right now
You look down on a lifetime
In this moment of joy
As the smell of the brine
Covers anything coy
And an Island approaches
From the mist up ahead
As the stillness reproaches
And retreats to its bed
The wonder returns
All speculation begins
Of the magic you’ll find
In this newness again
At the top of a mountain
Strange trees then appear
In a shape that’s uncertain
Neither familiar nor clear
The closer you get
The more they seem to move
As their shapes become giant
And your hopes then behoove
Now anchored offshore
With the dinghy in place
You can see them more clearly
Each shape and each face
Like monolithic Gods
They reign high on the hill
Looking down on who enter
With a warning that’s shrill
But where are the people
The Island is bare
Just giant stone carvings
That linger and stare
As you land on the beach
The ground starts to shake
And from deep in your heart
The primordial aches
The mountain then trembles
All paths become closed
With the thunder a warning
Any trespasser knows
As you run to the dinghy
Its been stolen and gone
And your ship is now missing
In its place just a song
Calling out in those words
That you already know….

“A price not paid dearly
     is only for show”

You turn back to the mountain
And in an explosion of light
You’re lifted up to the heavens
Spun around in a fright
Then shooting straight downward
Toward the mountain below
With force you are planted
Along monument row
And now that you’ve joined them
All questions abide
The distance and separation
In heaven collide….

“Can I leave, am I destined
   to be left here entombed ?”

And in language you recognize
You hear back so soon
From those pillars immortal
Voices start to be heard
Your welcome now total
Reborn in their words

“You can leave if you want to
  the choice is now yours
  but this mountain goes
  with you
  all places defer
  you’ve reached
  through the mystery
  you’ve passed your own test
  the tonic’s within you
   —the raven has fled”

(Villanova Pennsylvania: July, 2013)
254 · Dec 2016
New Millenniums Curse
Kurt Philip Behm Dec 2016
Compression ingestion,
  the world starts to implode

The numbers insipient,
—any space now in rows

From diamond to carbon,
  spinning wheels in reverse

The groundhog, the treadmill,
—new millenniums curse

(Brooklyn, New York: March, 2016)
254 · Jun 2018
Last Tear
Kurt Philip Behm Jun 2018
Watching myself
Wanting you
Standing alone
—the end in view

Watching myself
Reach out through the pain
Lost shadow of night
—last tear in your rain

(Villanova Pennsylvania: April, 2016)
254 · Dec 2016
Hope In The Air
Kurt Philip Behm Dec 2016
Left to themselves,
—words turn to prayer

Wishes now blessings,
—hope in the air

(Villanova Pennsylvania: June, 2016)
254 · Dec 2016
Walking The Line
Kurt Philip Behm Dec 2016
Blood,
fires from my pen
like a well shot round

14 karat *******,
mighty wound of
self aggression

Letters,
reducing armies
into a special force

Time dying,
as mortared ink strikes
the page

The raw edge of battle,
...new combatants die,
leaving their mark

Cursive warriors of the
spoken word,
martyred sentinels of a bigger truth,
—walking the line

(Richmond Virginia: December, 2002)
254 · Apr 2017
Transfusion's Masquerade
Kurt Philip Behm Apr 2017
How can you teach Poetry,
  or breathe for someone else

Sharing what your soul has freed,
  deep within yourself

Can you cross a bridge unbuilt,
  its toll not yours to pay
  
Squeezing blood from wounds long healed,
—transfusion’s masquerade

(Villanova Pennsylvania: April, 2017)
254 · Feb 15
Dear Winston ...
“Truth
is often attended
by a bodyguard
of lies”

A consequence
so precious
its veracity
must hide

Deep within
the smoke
on a battlefield
most dire

Victory burns
within each man
intrepid
— to inspire

(Tribute To D-Day: February, 2025)
253 · Apr 2019
Truth's Refrain
Kurt Philip Behm Apr 2019
Is freedom a mere habit
  or by will prescribed

Are our actions predetermined
  or self applied

Is consciousness a desert
  or paradise unclaimed

Each thought an oasis
  —watering truth’s refrain

(Villanova Pennsylvania: April, 2019)
253 · Nov 2016
Jailer To This Dream
Kurt Philip Behm Nov 2016
A prisoner of my poetry,
  a captive of this chair

The air I breathe connects me fast,
  this corner now my lair

I take my meals here sitting,
  my sleep in naps between

The written and the spoken word,
—both jailer to this dream

(Villanova Pennsylvania: November, 2016)
253 · Nov 2023
Last Posting
Kurt Philip Behm Nov 2023
The envelope
unopened
addressed
to himself
Inside
unspoken
old hopes
and dreams
Lost
and rerouted
the stamp was
foreign
Its port of entry
still
—unforeseen

(Dreamsleep: November, 2024)
252 · Jun 2017
2008-2016
Kurt Philip Behm Jun 2017
The fabric is torn
  all beds are unmade

The sheets have been soiled,
—the bugs to invade

(Villanova Pennsylvania: June, 2017)
252 · Jun 2019
No Dessert
Kurt Philip Behm Jun 2019
At some tables…
Time
is a dessert,
that is no longer
served

(Villanova Pennsylvania: December 16, 2016)
252 · Jul 2017
Death Never Quells
Kurt Philip Behm Jul 2017
Through age and infirmity,
  my voice cries loud

With feelings still timeless
  eyes not to cloud

The Reaper waits patient,
  his claim has been filed

From outside he savors,
   inside I smile

The music has changed,
  with my heart still in step

My vision most clear
  no lens to correct

As days take their toll
  on what’s left of this shell

What spirit embodies
—death never quells

(Villanova Pennsylvania: July, 2017)
252 · Jun 2024
The Hand Of God (unedited)
Kurt Philip Behm Jun 2024
It had been a long idyllic two-day ride from Taos to Jackson Hole.  The bike had been running well, in spite of the altitude, and the 1600 C.C. Yamaha Venture Royale handled with ease whatever the mountains had in store.

This was the second extended tour for Kurt and his twelve-year-old son, Trystan, who everyone called T.C. (Trystan Colin).  They had started in Long Beach, California, and were making a long semi-circular loop through Arizona, New Mexico, and then back to Wyoming.  After hiking and riding through Grand Teton National Park, they would head North through Yellowstone to Missoula Montana and ultimately reach their final northern destination — Glacier National Park.

This morning though, they would be traveling into an unknown world on the most proven and time-tested forms of transportation, horses and mules.

Teton Scenic Outfitters was the oldest guided tour company in Teton National Park.  Today’s route would take four tourists on a twenty-five-mile ride deep into the park.  At its highest point, the trail would be over 2000 feet above the Buffalo River. There would be two professional cowboys leading the tour.  The lead rider, and boss, was a 6’ 3’’, 200 lb., ex-college football player and rodeo bulldogger named Russ.  At the back was a diminutive, bow-legged, journeyman cowboy from Miles City Montana named Pete.  In between there was Kurt and his son T.C., both riding horses, and two nuns from the San Cristobal Convent in Cody Wyoming, riding mules.

There were two additional mules, between Russ and TC, that were loaded down with a week’s supplies for the Teton Art Camp at the end of the trail.  The Art Camp was a popular summer destination for both experienced and budding artists and depended on the supplies that Russ’s company delivered every Saturday.  At 8:30 a.m., four mules and four horses started the arduous and steep ascent up the narrow trail that was carved out of the east side of the mountain.

Before leaving, Russ had said: “In some places, the trail that’s cut into the rock is less than six feet wide. Don’t let this upset you.  The horses and mules do this almost every day, and they are more surefooted than any person walking.  Whatever you do, DON’T try to get off along the narrow trail.  We will come upon four open meadows, as we climb higher, and you can get off there, if need be, to walk a spell.”

Russ reminded everyone that they had signed a form acknowledging the risks of a mountain trail ride and that they were not afraid of heights. “Whatever you do, make sure to give the horse or mule its head.  Don’t try to guide it or change its direction, it will be following closely the animal in front of it and will become upset and disoriented if you try to change its forward motion.”

Pete, who was riding in the rear, had heard this speech a hundred times before.  He knew Russ would repeat it several more times as they continued their climb.  He also knew something that he hadn’t shared with anyone yet.  After feeling poorly for several weeks, he had traveled to the Medical Center in Idaho Falls for tests.  Two days later he had the results — Cystic Fibrosis.

Pete was only 26, but his doctor had told him that with treatment he had a very good chance of living into his fifties. “What can’t I do, Doc?” Pete had asked.  “Anything for right now,” the specialist advised. Just don’t get too far away from a good Medical Center, just in case. I wonder what he would think if he saw me today,” Pete mused.

The two nuns seemed to be enjoying themselves, but the one in the back, Sister Francis, directly in front of Pete, kept pulling on her right stirrup.  “I’ll have to adjust that when we stop,” Pete said to himself.
At 10:30 a.m., they came to the first clearing and Russ called everyone to gather around him. The meadow was a naturally formed pocket that carved into the mountain for about 100 yards.  There was tall spring grass growing as far as you could see.

“Hey T.C., whatta you think those two things are sticking above the grass about fifty yards ahead?” “I don’t know, Russ, they look like sticks.” “Well ... those sticks happen to be antlers that belong to a resting moose.”  Before Russ could say another word, T.C. had spurred his horse and was headed in the direction of the moose.  As T.C.’s father started to head after him, Russ grabbed his reins and said — “watch this.”

T.C. was still thirty yards from the antlers when an enormous moose stood up out of the grass. Seeing that, T.C.’s horse slammed on the brakes and T.C. went sliding off the right side of his mount.  Time seemed to be frozen in place until ... BAMM!

When Russ saw the moose stand up, he withdrew the Colt Peacemaker (45) from his holster and fired a shot into the air.  The horses and mules never moved, they were rifle trained, but the moose turned and ran into the woods at the far end of the meadow.

“Those things can get ornery when you take them by surprise.  I didn’t think your kid had the guts to charge a moose in the open field.  It’s one of the damnedest things I’ve seen in a long time.  With ‘try’ like that, he’ll make a good hand.

Both cowboys dismounted and went over to where T.C. was still sitting in the grass.  “Here, take this,” Russ said, as he gave T.C. a Snickers Bar from his vest pocket.  “The way you got off that horse would make any bronc rider proud.  Sister Marcella was filming you with her camera.  It you’re nice to her, I’ll bet she’ll send you a copy of the tape.”

Hearing Russ’s words were like his birthday and Christmas all rolled into one.  His rear end was a little sore, but his spirits had never been so high.  “Hey T.C., if your head hasn’t swelled too much, try this on,” said Pete.  Pete handed T.C. a baseball cap from his saddlebags.  It was a watershed moment for both father and son as T.C. took a giant step toward manhood.

Back on the trail, Russ repeated again: “Don’t try to guide your animal, they know where they’re going.”  In all the confusion, Pete had never gotten around to adjusting Sister Francis’ stirrup.  It was still bothering her, and her squirming was starting to affect her mule.

“Don’t mess with that stirrup anymore, Sister.  If you need to, just let your right leg hang down straight until we get to the next clearing.” Pete hadn’t finished speaking when Sister Francis pushed down again on the stirrup until it came loose and was dangling free.  The momentum of her pushing down with her right leg had pulled her body across the saddle, and she was now off the mule and standing — screaming — on the right side of her mule.

Less Than A Foot From The Edge ...

“Stop screaming, Sister, and I’ll try to get to you.”  Pete knew there wasn’t enough room on the trail for him to make it to the panicked nun, and he also knew he didn’t have enough strength in his upper body to pull her back if she started to fall.

Russ had heard the commotion and stopped the lead horse. He was too far in front to be of much help.  Pete’s best cowboy skill was that of a header in the team roping event.  The hat he had given T.C. was from the last rodeo he had won in Calgary, Alberta.  Pete instinctively took the rope from his saddle horn and formed a loop.  Just as he started to swing the rope, Sister Francis’ mule panicked and moved to the right pushing the nun toward the cliff.  As she started to fall, Pete managed to get a loop around her head and under one shoulder.  He pulled ******* the rope as she fell over the side.  He quickly took three turns around the saddle horn.  Pete knew he could hold it for a while without his horse moving, but if he tried to dismount, there’s no telling what the horse would do, and all three of them might go over the side.

It was just then that Pete saw something crawling between the legs of Sister Marcella’s mule.  T.C. had slid off the back of his horse and crawled between the legs of his dad’s horse, the two pack mules, and Sister Marcella’s now stationary mule.  When he got underneath Sister Francis’ mule, he started to talk in a gentle voice as he worked his way back to the rear.  Once under Pete’s horse, he reached over the side and grabbed the rope. Luckily, Sister Francis was only three feet below the rocky ledge. With T.C.’s help, and a lot of adrenalin, she was able to get her elbows up over the edge and slowly inch her way back onto the trail.  Pete held firm to the loop to make sure there was no backsliding.

T.C. and Sister Francis sat there for a long time until T.C. said: “Do you trust me, Sister?”  She said that she did as T.C. said: “Ok, follow me.” Together, they crawled underneath Pete’s horse to the very back of the train.  “How far is it to the next meadow, Pete?” T.C. asked.  “It’s only about a half-mile, “Pete called out.  “Ok, Sister Francis and I will walk the rest of the way, and we’ll meet up with you at the meadow.  Pete waved ahead to Russ, who was sitting there in a mild state of shock, to get going again.

It was a hero’s welcome when T.C. and Sister Francis arrived at the meadow.  “How did you know you could crawl underneath those horses and mule’s legs without getting trampled?” Russ asked.
“Well, it’s like this,” T.C. said.  “My dad was raised with horses and said that a horse would never step on a man.  I just figured it was the same with mules.”  “And where did you get the guts to try?” asked Pete.  “It wasn’t guts, I was just trying to finish what you had started.  If you hadn’t gotten that rope around her, nothing that I did would have mattered at all.”

“That rope was thrown from the hand of God,” said Sister Marcella, “and today, we were all blessed to see one of his miracles in action.”
The rest of the ride was uneventful.  Pete readjusted Sister Francis’ stirrup as Russ started to sing an old cowboy song.  “What’s the T stand for in T.C?” asked Russ.  “Trystan, my first name is Trystan, T.C.  answered back. With that, every Ian Tyson song they knew was being sung at high volume with the name ‘Trystan’ interjected into every one.

T.C.’s father had never been so proud.


Kurt Philip Behm: June, 2024
252 · Apr 2019
The Jester Laughs
Kurt Philip Behm Apr 2019
The ‘Deceivers Of Time
  Masquerade Ball’

Invitees file past

Yesterday in drag,
  Tomorrow disguised

Today—the Present’s mask

Memories hide
  in the shadows of hope

All wishes dancing fast

Until the Jester laughs
  as the final waltz ends

Deception to the last

(Villanova Pennsylvania: April, 2019)
252 · Dec 2021
Branching Inward
Kurt Philip Behm Dec 2021
The bark of my knowing
is rotting away
With grain left exposing
what memory betrays
Those things I pushed outward
root deeply within
As the oldest of wood
—makes the best violin

(Dreamsleep: December, 2021)
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